12 Ga. App. 727 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
In the legal principles involved, this case differs in one respect only from that of Young v. Waycross, 11 Ga. App. 846 (76 S. E. 648). As in the Young case, the plaintiff in error attacks the validity of the ordinance of the City of Waycross, passed July 27, 1900, by the terms of which it was made unlawful for any per.son to keep for illegal sale, barter, or exchange, within the corporate limits of the said city, any vinous, spirituous, malt, or intoxicating liquors. The plaintiff in error was tried by the mayor of the City of Waycross, adjudged guilty, and sentenced to pay la fine of $100 and to work on the chain-gang of the city for ninety days. Counsel for the plaintiff in error, in his brief, practically abandons the contention that the conviction is not sufficiently supported by the evidence, but urges that the certiorari should have been sanctioned because of improper remarks of counsel, and because of the invalidity of the ordinance under which the accused was adjudged guilty.
It appears from the record that the attorney for the city, in the course of his argument, used the following language: “Will Lowther is not guilty of selling this liquor himself, but he is undertaking to shield some one higher, and not 'having told who it
Granting the contention that in the evidence there is nothing to show that the accused was undertaking to shield some one higher, as he was accused of keeping intoxicating liquor for sale, proof of a sale (for which the municipality could not punish him) is merely indirect evidence, and in the present case the only evidence from which a “keeping for sale” can be inferred; and when the city, through its attorney, admitted that the accused was not guilty of selling the liquor, but was merely undertaking to shield some one else, the admission could well have been taken as an admission that the city had failed to make out its case, and the objectionable language, so far from being prejudicial to the accused, would have been beneficial to him if greater importance had been attached to it by the mayor. It was a non sequitur that the defendant was guilty because he had not named the person “higher up” whom the city attorney ■ suspected of being the real seller.
Judgment affirmed.