188 P. 58 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
Defendant has appealed from a judgment directing that he pay a fine in the sum of six hundred dollars or suffer the alternative of imprisonment until the fine be satisfied in the proportion of two dollars for each day that he shall be so imprisoned. An appeal is also taken from an order denying a motion for a new trial.
[1] Appellant was accused of having, on the twenty-second day of June, 1919, in certain "no-license territory," sold, furnished, distributed, and given away alcoholic liquors. These acts, under the provisions of the statute known as the Wyllie law, constitute a high grade misdemeanor. The principal evidence showing that appellant had on the day charged committed the alleged crime was that furnished by two detectives, who testified that two pints of whiskey were delivered to one of them, for which six dollars was paid for each pint. The defendant testified and denied that he had sold the whiskey as charged. Over the objection of defendant, the prosecution was permitted to show that the appellant, on the 25th of June, three days after the alleged commission of the offense charged, had sold some drinks of whisky, and that on July 12th he had sold and offered to deliver a number of half-pint bottles of the same kind of liquor. Evidence was also admitted showing that a raid was made on the premises of appellant on the 14th of July, 1919, and that a number of bottles of whisky were found upon the premises. When testimony as to the subsequent sales of the whisky was offered, appellant's counsel made objection on the ground that such testimony was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. Counsel for the people evidently *555
assumed the testimony was competent, for he stated to the court, when confronted with the objection, that he was offering it "on the ruling that prior or subsequent evidence may be shown to prove the probability or improbability of the offense." The trial judge agreed with the prosecutor that the testimony was admissible, although he instructed the jury that it was not "evidence of the authenticity of the offense of the 22d, but because of the rule that permits such testimony." That this testimony, in view of the denial made by the defendant that he had sold any liquor to the detectives, was highly prejudicial, cannot be doubted. Had the evidence referred only to the alleged transaction occurring on June 22d, the jury might have been left with a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant. But with evidence of repeated sales accumulated before it, it is quite natural that such doubt would be dissipated. Evidence of other offenses committed, both before and after that charged against a defendant, is sometimes admissible. The cases, however, in which such proof may be made have been classified by the California courts. We find that such evidence is admissible where it tends to establish a material fact in the particular offense charged, or a motive therefor. (People v. Lane,
The judgment and order are reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.