148 Mass. 162 | Mass. | 1889
The defendant testified that she owned the yard and building referred to in the evidence, that she occupied
The testimony as to the persons seen going into and coming out of the defendant’s premises may be considered, first, in reference to the kind or quality of the evidence, and secondly, in reference to the time to which it relates. It has often been held, that, if intoxicated persons are seen at a place, or coming from a place, that is evidence upon the question whether intoxicating liquor is kept for sale there. So of people going in and out of a shop at all hours of the day and evening, and carrying in and out jugs and demijohns. Commonwealth v. Taylor, 14 Gray, 26. Commonwealth v. Maloney, 16 Gray, 20. Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 97 Mass. 224. And we cannot say that, even without evidence of intoxication, or of carrying jugs and the like, persons may not be seen going to and from a place in such numbers, at such times, and under such circumstances, as to thereby furnish evidence proper to be considered, in connection with other circumstances, as indicating that intoxicating liquors are sold there. Whether the evidence objected to in this case was of any significance does not appear. The witnesses stated the number of persons, and the occasions. These may have been such as to indicate that the persons were there as frequenters of a drinking place, and not as ordinary visitors of a family, or as
It was objected to as covering a period three weeks after the day to which the principal evidence related, which was the day before the complaint was made. It is clear that the defendant could not be convicted upon evidence showing merely that she committed an offence after the making of the complaint. Evidence could not properly be introduced for the purpose of showing that, either as a substantive fact, or as furnishing an argument that she was probably guilty of the offence named in the complaint because she had committed another like it. Commonwealth v. Jackson, 132 Mass. 16. But the illegal keeping of intoxicating liquor with intent to sell it, like keeping a nuisance, is a continuing offence, which may extend over a long or a short period of time. Commonwealth v. Purdy, 146 Mass. 138. If attention is directed to any point of time during the keeping, there is a probability, from the very fact of keeping then, that the same condition has existed from some previous time, and will continue for some time into the future. And so, as to offences which are in their nature continuing, evidence has often been received of a condition a little before or a little after the time within which the offence must be proved. And this rule has been repeatedly applied to prosecutions for unlawfully keeping intoxicating liquor with intent to sell it. Commonwealth v. Carney, 108 Mass. 417. Commonwealth v. Stoehr, 109 Mass. 365. Commonwealth v. Berry, 109 Mass. 366. Commonwealth v. Dearborn, 109 Mass. 368. Commonwealth v. Matthews, 129 Mass. 487. Commonwealth v. Ferry, 146 Mass. 203. The introduction of this kind of evidence should be carefully guarded, and the testimony should be confined to a time very near the time in question, or should be connected with it by' evidence showing a continuance of the same condition through the entire intervening period. But in this respect much must be left to the discretion of the presiding judge. In the case at bar, we cannot say that this discretion was erroneously exercised.
The last exception was to the instruction given to the jury. It is true that, under our Constitution, one charged with a crime cannot “ be compelled to accuse or furnish evidence against himself,” nor can any inference be drawn against him from his
Upon the statement of the present case contained in the exceptions, we cannot say that the instruction given was erroneous or misleading.
Exceptions overruled.