279 S.W. 826 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1926
The offense is the unlawful transportation of intoxicating liquor; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of two years.
Appellant was apprehended while driving upon the public highway in a Cadillac automobile. In the automobile there were 223 quarts of a liquid which the jury found to be whiskey. There were license numbers at Fort Worth upon the car, and in it were Louisiana number plates. Most of the bottles of the liquid were not observable upon a casual examination of the car. Part of them were back of the upholstering, and a part of them were underneath the floor, where there had been constructed a box or false bottom under the frame. The upholstering was thick and also had what the witness described as "a kind of a box". *74
The sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of the jury that the liquid was whiskey is the sole question for review. The liquid was delivered to the sheriff of Harrison County. Two officers were present at the time of the arrest. One of them said:
"I made an examination of the car at that time and found it contained bottled-in-bond whiskey, something over two hundred quarts."
This witness said that he did not taste the contents of any of the bottles and could not swear that it was whiskey except from its appearance and odor. There were some broken bottles that had the odor of whiskey. The other officer said that the liquid was in a specially built car, "looked like for the purpose of hauling whiskey." It had the whiskey behind the upholstering and underneath the car. The liquid was bonded whiskey. The arresting officers did not remove the whiskey from the car. The sheriff testified that he was present at the jail when the car arrived; that it contained 223 quarts of whiskey. He said:
"Yes, sir; it was whiskey. The whiskey is down at the jail; none of it has been destroyed. It is all there. I can produce some of it here in court. It is bonded and labeled whiskey. * * * I did not drink any of the whiskey. I would swear that it was intoxicating. We broke two bottles in getting it out of the car."
He further said that the bottles were examined by him, and that he would swear that it was whiskey from the looks and smell of it; that he had handled much of the article and could not be mistaken. From the odor he could tell that it contained some alcohol. It seems that the sheriff produced some of the bottles in court. He said that he knew it to be whiskey; that there were 122 or 123 quarts of Canadian Club Whiskey; that it was in the kind of bottles used by the manufacturers of Canadian Club Whiskey. One of the bottles in possession of the sheriff was opened while he was upon the witness stand and smelled by him. He testified that he had not tasted it, but that it had the odor of whiskey.
In our judgment, the verdict of the jury touching the intoxicating properties of the liquid does not rest alone upon the opinion of the witnesses, based upon the odor of the liquid. If the liquid in the bottles was whiskey, no further proof of its intoxicating qualities would be demanded. The courts take judicial knowledge of the fact that whiskey is an intoxicating liquor. Rutherford v. State,
It is true that it was within the power of the State to have the liquid analyzed. It is not essential, however, that this be done. See Cathey v. State, 252 S.W. Rep. 534. The intoxicating quality of the liquid was provable by circumstances. See Jones v. State, 86 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Cabiale v. United States, 276 Fed. Rep. 769; People v. Emmons,
An affirmance of the judgment is ordered.
Affirmed.