184 S.W.2d 162 | Tenn. | 1945
The defendant and her husband were convicted of the unlawful possession of liquor and she alone has appealed *46
in error to this Court. Her case must be reversed on authority ofLea v. State,
The facts in the two cases are almost identical. The defendant is a married woman and lived with her husband in a house rented near Lebanon. Acting under a search warrant officers entered the premises. They searched the house and found nothing. They then searched the garden immediately adjacent to the house and about 20 feet distant found a quantity of liquor concealed in a hole. The only difference between this and the previous Lea Case is that the officers found the liquor in the house in the former case instead of outside the house. The premises there were rented and occupied by the couple as here.
In the former case the conviction of the husband was sustained but the conviction of the wife was set aside, it being said that the possession would be referred to the husband under such facts and not to the wife. This was upon authority of Crocker v.State,
The State refers to Morton v. State,
In the case before us, as in the previous Lea Case, there is nothing to indicate that this woman exercised any *47 act of possession with respect to the liquor. The mere circumstance that a bootlegger's wife continues to live with him and does not report him is scarcely sufficient to make her criminally responsible for his acts.
Reversed. *48