18 So. 2d 435 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1944
Conviction was under Section 131, Title 29, Code of 1940, for the illegal possession of a moonshine still.
The State's case, under the evidence, was that the defendant and two others, not on trial, were working at the still when the raid was made. The defendant and one Stout were "measuring up the liquor", siphoning it from a large barrel into smaller kegs, and the third, one Devaney, was removing the worm from the still. When the State's witness first obtained a view of the scene "they were pulling the fire from under the still." The still and surrounding premises indicated a run had just been completed and about thirty-five gallons of liquor had been run off.
The appeal challenges the sufficiency of this evidence to sustain the charge. A reversal is argued for the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for defendant. The Moon (Moon v. State,
As was said by the late lamented Judge Samford in the case of Lock v. State,
It is, of course, axiomatic, in such cases, that a directed verdict is improper where the evidence raises a substantial inference against innocence. Brown v. State,
In view of the omission from the record of the court's oral charge, action in refusing the special written charges (except the general affirmative charge) cannot be reviewed. Allen v. State,
The whole case carefully considered, we can find nothing to justify a reversal.
Affirmed.