21 S.E.2d 438 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1942
1. The accusation charged the illegal possession of intoxicating liquor in a dry county. The crime alleged is a violation of a general law.
2. "When the statute provides that the commission of an act by any person, or under all circumstances, shall constitute an offense, and then declares that the provisions of the act shall not apply to a particular class of persons, or to a specified set of circumstances, the burden is on the accused to show that he comes within some of the exceptions." Rumph
v. State,
3. The Code, § 58-201, a violation of which was charged, creates a general offense, and the exceptions stated therein are merely to the general offense and are not essential elements in the offense charged. Plemmons v. State,
4. All the essential elements of the crime charged were proved, and there was no sufficient proof that the defendant belonged to any class of persons excepted from the provisions of the act.
The defendant contends that the liquor seized was government liquor, according to the officers making the seizure; that it was State stamp tax-paid liquor, according to the statement of the defendant; that one who transports such liquor must of necessity possess it, but he does so as part of the transportation; that he possesses it for that purpose; that it is not independent of the act of transporting, but is an incident thereto; that, under certain circumstances, it is legal to transport liquors in this State on which the State stamp tax has been paid; and that he was not tried for *830
transporting liquor but for possessing it, and was convicted where the proof, he insists, showed that the liquor he is alleged to have had possession of was being transported legally under the laws of this State at the time. "The law as to the possession of whisky in counties of this State which have not legalized the sale thereof is still a general law as to those counties. It is not necessary to allege or prove that the defendant does not belong to the class of persons excepted from the provisions of the act. This is purely defensive." Jackson v. State,
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur.