65 So. 302 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The demurrers filed by the state to defendant’s plea of former jeopardy were properly sustained. The plea was defective on two grounds pointed out by the demurrer. In the first place, it appears that the prosecution before the recorder of the city of New Decatur, which is set up in the plea as a bar to the present prosecution, was not commenced until after the present, prosecution, and while it was still pending and undertermined. Section 1222 of the Code, providing in effect that a conviction or acquittal of a violation of a municipal ordinance shall bar a prosecution in the state court for a misdemeanor based on the same act,, has no application to a case Avhere, as here, the state court first acquires jurisdiction of the offense. The general rule, which is in no Avise modified by the statute cited, is that the jurisdiction of a court depends upon the state of affairs existing at the time it is invoked, and, if the jurisdiction once attaches to the person and subject-matter of the litigation, the subsequent happening of events, though they are of such a character as would have prevented jurisdiction from attaching in the first instance, will not operate to oust jurisdiction already attached.- — Harmon v. State, 8 Ala. App. 317, 62 South. 438. If the act for which defendant is here prosecuted is the same act for which he was tried in said municipal court, his remedy was to plead to the jurisdiction there the pendency of the prosecution
In the next place, even if the prosecution before the recorder had been commenced before the present one, the plea is still defective, in that, from its averments, it nowhere appears that the act constituting the offense for Avhich defendant is now prosecuted was the same act as that for which he was prosecuted and acquitted before the recorder. A plea of former jeopardy, to be legally sufficient, must aver, among other things, the identity of the offense charged in the first proceeding with that charged in the last. — Henry v. State, 33 Ala. 389; Foster v. State, 39 Ala. 229; Gordon v. State, 71 Ala. 315. We find nothing in the case of Olmstead v. State, 92 Ala. 64, 9 South. 737, cited us by appellant’s counsel, that changes or can be construed as intended to change this rule of pleading. This case merely discusses what evidence would sustain such a plea, where the evidence on the former trial was so general in its nature as not to identify and single out any particular sale.
Under previous adjudications of this court, there is no merit in the objection by defendant to the introduction in evidence by the state of the certified copy of the United States internal revenue license purporting to have been issued to him as proprietor of the Vine St. Grocery Company. The points here raised with respect thereto were fully discussed and decided by this court adversely to the contention of appellant in the case of Woodward v. State, 5 Ala. App. 205, 206, 59 South. 688.
The defendant contends that he never took out such a license, nor authorized any one else to do so for him, and Ayas never in possession of or knew anything about
In addition to this evidence, the state proved that the defendant’s residence is just a few feet from his store; that, in pursuance of the power contained in a search warrant, defendant’s store and residence were both searched; that no prohibited liquors were found in his store, but- that in the bathroom of his residence there were found in the bathtub thereof, packed in ice, 98 bottles of beer, and that under the bathtub was found a quantity of eight-pound paper bags. The defendant, as a witness for himself, testified that he had the beer there for his wife, who was then a nursing mother; that the doctors advised that he keep beer for her; and that, as he was compelled to order it from a distance, he for convenience bought it by the cask, which contained 98 bottles.
We can readily understand why, as a matter of convenience, he would order it by the cask so as to have it on hand as needed by her; but we cannot understand why either her wants or his conveniences in serving them would demand putting the whole cask on ice at one time, thereby resulting in a deprivation of the use of the bathtub for other purposes until the beer was consumed. Did not the defendant, as often happens, injure his cause by his own evidence? We are of opinion that the whole evidence was sufficient to authorize the court in submitting the case to the jury, and that there was no error in refusing the affirmative charge.
Nor did the court err in refusing the other written charge requested by defendant, since the charge is fully covered by given charge No. 6.
Affirmed.