109 So. 521 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
The indictment was in two counts. The first charged manufacturing whisky and the second unlawful possession. The verdict of the jury convicting the defendant under the second count was equivalent to an acquittal of the charge under the first count of the indictment, so that it will be unnecessary for us to pass upon any question presented by the record and relating solely to the first count. Tuggle v. State,
It was proper for the court to allow the solicitor to propound questions to the witness Gillespie qualifying him as to his knowledge of whisky, stills, beer, etc. When so qualified the witness could testify as to what he found at the place where the still here involved was located and as to what it was. Everything there present and relating to the crime charged was a part of the res gestæ. Hewitt v. State,
Counsel in making argument to the jury have a right to state their conception of what the evidence is. This is what the solicitor did, whereas the statement of defendant's counsel ruled out by the court was not based upon any evidence disclosed by this record, and was calculated only to influence the minds of the jury against an officer who was in the discharge of his duty. The rulings of the court as to the argument of the solicitor and in excluding the excerpt from the argument of defendant's counsel were free from error.
The excerpt from the court's oral charge follows:
"You ought to be just as much interested, gentlemen, in the conviction of the defendant, if he is guilty, as you are in his discharge if he is not guilty, and you should be just as much interested in acquitting the defendant, if he is not guilty, as you are in convicting him if he is guilty."
This admonition to the jury is not error, nor is it unfair to defendant. Admonition of the *493 high and sacred duty resting upon juries by nisi prius judges should be encouraged rather than condemned.
The possession necessary to a conviction under the statute condemning the possession of certain stills is defined in Berry v. State,
"This is a prosecution against this defendant, and you are not here to try any other case. Some testimony has been introduced here about some shooting that was done, and that the defendant was shot by one of the officers, and that one of the things that occurred at the time they said this law was being violated there, but you are not trying that, and the simple and only question for you to determine from all this testimony is whether or not the defendant on the occasion testified about was exercising any acts of ownership or control or dominion over the still down there."
This excerpt taken and considered alone would be error. The crime condemned by the statute is the unlawful possession of a still, etc.
Acts of ownership, dominion, or control over personal property are evidence of possession to be considered by the jury in determining whether or not the defendant had such possession as the law contemplates and condemns. Taken alone the excerpt is invasive of the province of the jury, for, notwithstanding acts which might indicate ownership or possession, the jury might conclude from the whole evidence that no such ownership or possession existed. However, excerpts from oral charges of courts in the trial of cases are not to be considered alone and apart, but are to be read in connection with the entire oral charge and the given written charges. Holladay v. State,
"It is not necessary that he should be the owner, and it is not necessary that he should have the exclusive possession, but if he is interested in it with somebody else and operating it with somebody else, or exercises any acts of dominion andcontrol over it [italics ours], that would be possession within the meaning of this law."
The court fell into error in the statement above as indicated by the italics and emphasized the error in the excerpts excepted to. The crime fixed and denounced by section 4656 of the Code of 1923 is the manufacture, sale, giving away, or having in possession certain specified personal property to be used for the manufacture of prohibited liquors. Acts of ownership or dominion may be proven as evidence of the possession condemned and from which the jury must form their conclusion and make their verdict. When this court, therefore, charged the jury that if the defendant exercised any act of dominion and control over the still in question that such would be possession within the meaning of the law, and "the simple and only question for you to determine from all the testimony is whether or not the defendant on the occasion testified about was exercising any acts of ownership or control or dominion over the still down there," he fell into the error of invading their province. Acts of dominion are evidentiary, which though proven may be under all the evidence in the case consistent with defendant's innocence. The charge violates section 9507 of the Code of 1923, and for this error the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.