193 P. 623 | Okla. | 1920
This is an appeal from a judgment of the county court of Tulsa county, *309 forfeiting one Cadillac automobile to the state for the reason the same was being used in violation of law, to wit, conveying intoxicating liquor. The record discloses that S. Pogue was driving the car and was conveying some four one-half pints of whisky in said car through the streets of the city of Tulsa. H.C. Peavler intervened in the action, claiming title to the car, alleging that he was in the taxicab business and that Pogue was in his employ, and if Pogue was conveying liquor in said automobile, it was without his knowledge and consent. The Charles Lukins Automobile Company intervened and claimed a mortgage upon the car in the sum of one thousand ($1,000.00) dollars.
The Attorney General has filed a confession of error admitting the judgment erroneous as to the Charles Lukins Automobile Company, pursuant to the rule announced in the cases of One Hudson Super-Six Automobile v. State,
It was stipulated that the Charles Lukins Automobile Company was the holder of a valid chattel mortgage on said automobile, which is on file in the clerk's office of Tulsa county, and, following the rule announced in the cases heretofore cited, the judgment as to the Charles Lukins Automobile Company should be reversed. There is no stipulation in the record that the car was used without the knowledge and consent of the intervener, Peavler, but that fact must be determined from the evidence.
The evidence is undisputed that liquor was being conveyed in said automobile, and that Pogue was rightfully in possession of said car. Those facts being undisputed, the burden of proof was then upon the owner to establish the fact that the car was so unlawfully used without his knowledge, fault, or consent, and that it was being used under circumstances that would not impute knowledge and consent to him.
The evidence in the case discloses that the automobile was, on the night in question, driven by Pogue back and forth from a certain restaurant in Tulsa, which was referred to in the evidence as a "booze joint." The parties who were with Pogue, and who were riding around with him, were all referred to during the trial as "bootleggers," and Pogue himself was referred to as a bootlegger. When the car was apprehended Pogue had four one-half pints of whisky which he broke. Peavler testified that Pogue had only worked for him a couple of nights, and was driving the auto as a taxi, and he, Peavler, knew nothing of the car being used for transporting intoxicating liquor. Peavler acknowledged, on cross-examination, that he had been engaged prior thereto in operating a road-house on the outskirts of Tulsa, and while engaged in conducting the roadhouse he was selling black bottles, and during that time Pogue was, in his employ. The record discloses that the place Peavler had been operating as a roadhouse was closed by injunction.
While the trial court did not make any direct finding as to whether Pogue was conveying said liquor without the knowledge and consent of Peavler, yet the judgment of the court includes a finding that he either had knowledge and consented to the same, or the car was being operated under such circumstances as would impute knowledge and consent to him.
We are unable to say that the finding of the court upon this question of fact is clearly against the weight of the evidence. The judgment of the trial court as to the intervener, Peavler, is affirmed. The judgment of the court as to the Charles Lukins Automobile Company is reversed and remanded, with instructions to grant it a new trial, and for the trial court to determine what amount, if any, is still due at this time upon its note and mortgage.
RAINEY, C. J., and HARRISON, KANE, PITCHFORD, JOHNSON, HIGGINS, and BAILEY, JJ., concur.