208 N.W. 189 | Minn. | 1926
The offense is charged as of December 27, 1923. The evidence shows actual sales on November 21, 1923, November 27, 1923, and December 21, 1923. On December 31, 1923, officers with a search warrant went into her home and found a small quantity of liquor. The evidence showed that on January 11, 1924, she talked to a witness about selling as soon as a certain event happened. There was other evidence of guilt, but no direct proof of any sale on December 27, 1923. It is claimed that, in the absence of proof of sale on that date, evidence of subsequent acts is inadmissible. This position is not well taken. The charge is keeping a place where liquor is sold. All the evidence was admissible in support of the accusation. State v. Lipman,
Defendant had been tried and acquitted for running a blind pig on December 21, 1923. Appellant claimed the evidence as to the sale on that date was inadmissible because it put her in jeopardy twice for the same offense. We do not think so. She could not have been put in jeopardy for the crime for which she had been acquitted. She was in jeopardy only for the crime for which she *468
was on trial. Evidence used in a former trial is competent to show material facts in issue in a subsequent trial. There are many cases where the same act may constitute an element of different crimes. Acquittal in the trial of one offense cannot exclude the evidence used in that trial from use in the trial of another offense. We are not considering cases where the same single criminal act is the basis for both prosecutions as in State v. Moore,
The evidence is that the liquor purchased was moonshine, that it was potable as a beverage and that it was intoxicating. This is sufficient to sustain the verdict. State v. Tremont,
Affirmed.