148 Ark. 585 | Ark. | 1921
Appellant was convicted under an indictment charging him with having manufactured “one pint of alcoholic, ardent, vinous and intoxicating spirits, commonly called ‘whiskey.’ ” It is undisputed that appellant erected a crude distillery m an outhouse at the home of one Ezell Trice in Lonoke County, where he lived, and that he attempted to manufacture whiskey. Appellant admitted as much in his testimony, but he denied that he completed the distillation of the whiskey from the raw material which he was using. He used a metal coal oil tank or barrel and a wooden keg, into one of which he put the sour mash and the two containers were connected with a cane pipe used as a “worm.” Appellant testified that he put into the keg a half-bushel of chops, two gallons of molasses and five buckets of water. A hole in the ground was used as a furnace, and the metal barrel was set over it. A fire was built in the'furnace, and after the contents of the barrel became heated ah explosion occurred. Appellant’s effort to manufacture whiskey was thus discovered, and his arrest followed in a few hours, as soon as the services of an officer could be procured.
Appellant freely admitted to the officer, and admitted on the witness stand, that he was attempting to make whiskey for his own use, but he claimed that he did not succeed in the effort, which was frustrated by the explosion.
After appellant was arre,sted and taken to jail, the officer went back to the house of Ezell Trice, and the latter carried him out a short distance from the house and discovered buried in the ground two jugs and a bottle of white “moonshine” whiskey. Trice testified that he did not put the whiskey there and did not know it was there until it was discovered on the search made by him and the officers. One .of the officers who made the arrest testified concerning the condition of the crude distillery that he found, and also stated that some of the material used in making the liquor had been poured out on the ground.
It is earnestly contended that the evidence is insufficient to establish the fact that appellant manufactured any whiskey; that the proof merely shows that he was engaged in an effort to make whiskey, but that he did not complete it. Wé think, however, that the evidence is sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the operation of the distillery resulted in the manufacture of whiskey. The fact that used raw material was poured out on the ground and also the fact that whiskey was found on the premises is sufficient to warrant the inference that whiskey was manufactured there by appellant. The two jugs and the bottle of whiskey were found on the premises only a few hundred yards from the house of Trice, who testified that neither he nor his wife put the whiskey there, and there is no evidence that any one else besides appellant frequented the premises.
It is next contended that the court erred in giving an instruction to the .effect that the defendant could be convicted if the proof showed that he had manufactured “alcoholic, ardent, vinous, malt or fermented liquors which, could be used and drank as intoxicating beverage, ’ ’ when the indictment specifically charged the manufacture of whiskey. Conceding, under the rule announced by this court in Carleton v. State, 129 Ark. 361, that the particular language of the indictment was descriptive of the offense and that the proof must be confined to the kind of liquor specifically named, we are of the opinion that the instruction given by the court was not prejudicial, as the sole issue in this case was whether or not appellant succeeded in manufacturing whiskey which he was undertaking to do at the distillery when the explosion oe-, curred. Appellant admitted that he was attempting to manufacture liquor, and, as before stated, the sole question was whether or not he succeeded in the effort. It is not conceivable that the jury were misled by this instruction and reached the conclusion that appellant manufactured anything else but whiskey. We think the instruction was harmless.
Again, it is insisted that the court erred in permitting one of the officers to testify concerning the finding of whiskey near Trice’s home. We think that this had some tendency to prove that liquor was manufactured by appellant on the premises, and that the ruling of the court in admitting the testimony was correct.
Judgment affirmed.