299 S.W. 796 | Tenn. | 1927
The presentment upon which the plaintiff in error was tried and convicted contains a single count, and charges that the plaintiff in error unlawfully possessed intoxicating liquor received from a common or other carrier.
In submitting the case to the jury the trial judge made no reference to that portion of the accusation which described the intoxicating liquor possessed by the plaintiff in error as having been received by him from a carrier, and instructed the jury that if the plaintiff in error was in possession of intoxicating liquor he should be found guilty as charged.
The error in this instruction, in so far as the presentment was predicated upon Chapter 12 of the Public Acts of 1917, defining the offense, is demonstrated in the opinion of this court inHayes v. State,
The Act of 1917 was amended by Chapter 22 of the Public Acts of 1925, construed and upheld as to its constitutionality inSanders v. State,
It is still necessary to a conviction under the second section of the Act of 1917 that the jury should find that the whisky in the possession of the accused was received by him after February 2, 1917. The lapse of time since said date has, perhaps, wrought some change in the quantum of proof necessary to support such finding, and slight circumstances have been held sufficient by this court to support the jury's finding, but there is nothing in the statute as amended which would support an instruction to the jury that bare proof of possession is sufficient to convict, on the single charge of possessing.
The trial judge, therefore, should have instructed the jury that before there could be a conviction the jury must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the plaintiff in error was in possession of intoxicating liquor received by him since February 2, 1917.
The evidence offered by the State consisted of the testimony of officers describing the result of a search of the dwelling of the plaintiff in error, made pursuant to a search warrant.
The plaintiff in error objected to this evidence on the ground that the affidavit on which the search warrant was issued was inadequate and fatally deficient.
The affidavit purports to have been made upon information which the affiant believed to be true, set out in the affidavit as follows:
"This information was communicated to me by two negroes and one white man, that said defendant is now in possession of a quantity of intoxicating liquor." *627
In Elliott v. State,
"It is not necessary that the affiant should have personal knowledge of the existence of grounds calling for a search warrant, but such a warrant may be based on an affidavit made on information, if the information is of the character that indicates probable cause for believing a search warrant to be authorized."
The statement in the affidavit that three men had told the affiant that the plaintiff in error was in possession of intoxicating liquor, is hardly a statement of information sufficient to authorize the issuance of a search warrant. If the affidavit had contained any statement that the informants claimed to have seen intoxicating liquor in the possession of the plaintiff in error, or had witnessed the circumstances, described in the affidavit, justifying a belief that intoxicating liquor was unlawfully in the possession of the plaintiff in error, it may be that the affidavit would meet the rule above stated.
However, there is nothing in the affidavit before us to indicate whether the informants of the affiant were not themselves speaking from hearsay rather than from personal knowledge, or were merely expressing a conclusion from undisclosed circumstances.
We think, therefore, that the trial judge should have sustained the objection of the plaintiff in error to the evidence of the State, based upon the insufficiency of the affidavit upon which the search warrant was issued.
Reversed and remanded. *628