239 P. 952 | Wyo. | 1925
The information in this case charges that the defendant, Ed Rosencrance, on November 18, 1921, in the county of Albany, State of Wyoming, did, in violation of law,
"unlawfully and without a permit, possess intoxicating liquor, being moonshine whiskey with an alcoholic content in excess of one-half of one per cent of alcohol, and said Rosencrance, defendant, did then and there unlawfully and without a permit, sell to H.O. Winkler four drinks of intoxicating liquor, to wit moonshine whiskey with an alcoholic content in excess of one-half of one per cent at and for the price of fifty cents per drink; and said Rosencrance, defendant, there and then unlawfully and without a permit, gave to said H.O. Winkler intoxicating liquor, to wit moonshine whiskey with an alcoholic content of more than one-half of one per cent, and that each of the above acts above set forth was then and there prohibited and unlawful."
No stress was laid in the case upon possession of any liquor by the defendant, except in connection with selling and *365 giving it to said H.O. Winkler. The defendant was convicted as charged, and sentenced by the court to imprisonment for three months and to pay a fine of $500. From the judgment so rendered the defendant brings the case here by petition in error. The parties will be referred to herein as in the case below. With the consent of the court the county and prosecuting attorney of Albany county was, at his request, permitted to appear and represent the State in this court, in place of the Attorney General.
1. The main testimony in this case was the testimony which H.O. Winkler had given at the preliminary hearing given the defendant. Said witness was absent from the state and was not present at the trial in the district court. He had been cross-examined at the preliminary hearing by counsel who then represented defendant. His testimony had been taken down in shorthand and the shorthand notes extended by the stenographer. These extended notes, the correctness thereof having been sworn to, were read to the jury. But in addition thereto the state used Mr. Brown as a witness, who acted as justice of the peace at the preliminary hearing, and proved certain isolated statements, made by Winkler at said preliminary hearing, by him. It seems to be the rule that where the original testimony is reduced to writing under the sanction of the court, the writing is competent and the best evidence. 22 C.J. 439. Whether or not the testimony at the preliminary hearing was reduced to writing under the sanction of the court does not appear, and we are not called on to decide whether that is permissible under our statutes or whether the former testimony of an absent witness — absent in contemplation of the rules of law — may only be shown by introducing the testimony as taken down by the stenographer. Mr. Brown was not asked as to whether or not he remembered the substance of the testimony of the witness. It does not appear that he did. In the absence of a showing to that effect, he should not have been permitted to testify. This question is fully *366
discussed and decided in the case of Foley v. State,
2. In reading the record before us, we cannot help but be impressed by the fact that the admission of testimony of other crimes, or attempted crimes of the defendant was influential or controlling in bringing about his conviction in the case at bar. This testimony related (a) to keeping a gambling place in connection with a place for dispensing liquor; (b) to an attempt to buy protection from a police officer for such gambling place, referred to as the Murphy place; and (c) to having or conducting an illicit still and an attempt to buy protection in connection with it from the sheriff of Albany county. The principal errors assigned refer to the admission of such testimony. It is, of course, well known that the commission of a separate crime cannot ordinarily be proved in support of the one named in the information or indictment. That rule is applicable to liquor cases as well as to others. People v. Pagni, (Cal.App.)
"It is a dangerous species of evidence, not only because it requires a defendant to meet and explain other acts than those charged against him and for which he is on trial, but also because it may lead the jury to violate the great principle that a party is not to be convicted of one crime by proof that he is guilty of another."
In Towne v. People,
"But the general rule is salutary and a departure from it is perilous, and hence courts are reluctant to extend the exception to the rule beyond well established lines."
The rule with its exceptions was stated in Gibson v. State,
"It is a general rule that it is not permissible to prove or admit circumstances going to show that the defendant committed another offense or other offenses of similar character to that charged, except when necessary to show scienter or intent, establish identity, complete the res gestae, show motive or make out a chain of circumstantial evidence of guilt in respect to the act charged."
With these general rules in mind, we shall proceed to discuss the errors assigned as to the admission of testimony of each of the other crimes above mentioned.
3. The main testimony in this case was, as stated before, that of the absent witness H.O. Winkler. He testified that he went to the Murphy place, where he saw the defendant, saying to the latter: "Give me a shot;" that defendant thereupon gave him intoxicating liquor in a small whiskey glass for which he paid fifty cents; that he bought two other drinks for each of which he paid the same amount. The witness was then asked what else he did and he answered: "I asked him if there was a game on. He said no, but there will be in a little bit;" that he, the witness, later went into the basement of the building and played poker for money; that defendant was not there at first, but came later and brought drinks of whiskey for those that were playing without any charge therefor; that he became intoxicated as the result of the drinks sold and given him; that he, the witness, played with a Jap, a Swede and one Berg; that he bet $15 with the Swede and won the bet; that he had fifteen dollars' worth of yellow checks, had a stack of checks for $10, and some red checks amounting to three or four dollars; that he pledged his watch for a credit in the amount of $30; that he had $80 and lost it all. Further details need not be mentioned. We have stated sufficient to show that an attempt was made in every way to prove that the defendant conducted a gambling den in the Murphy place. Objections were made to much of this testimony, and exceptions were reserved to the adverse ruling of the court. Before *368
proceeding to discuss these objections, it may be well to mention here that defendant denied Winkler's and other damaging testimony against him, claiming that at the time testified to by Winkler, he was sick in bed and that he never saw Winkler. In this he was corroborated by another witness. There is also apparently reputable testimony to show that instead of Winkler becoming intoxicated as the result of any liquor sold or given to him by defendant, he was already very much intoxicated shortly before he claims to have seen the defendant. The county attorney, appearing on behalf of the state herein, argues that the foregoing testimony as to gambling was admissible as part of the res gestae. We fail to see, however, the connection between the sale of whiskey by defendant and the gambling; the fact that gambling was permitted in the Murphy place had no necessary connection, so far as we can see, with the sale or gift of liquor there by defendant. In the case of State v. Lowry,
"Testimony was improperly admitted relating to gambling in the defendant's said place of business. * * * That testimony had no possible relation to the offense for which the appellant was being tried, and its admission could not have been otherwise than prejudicial. But no exception having been taken to it, and exceptions having been reserved to other errors, the matter is referred to here merely to indicate the impropriety of admitting such testimony upon the trial of this case."
The converse situation appears in Baldwin v. State,
"If the county attorney wanted to prosecute Baldwin for maintaining a gambling house and a place where intoxicating liquor was sold, he had a right to do so, and it was his duty to do so, if the facts warranted, but that issue was not raised in the case at bar, wherein the persons were charged with the offense of gaming only."
It is argued on behalf of the state that the testimony was admissible to show intent. But intent is no element of the crime with which the defendant in this case stands charged. State v. Seidler, (Mo.App.)
4. The defendant, when on the witness stand, was asked whether or not he did not go to the house of the sheriff of Albany county about November 15, 1921, stating to him in *371
substance that "they had another still and didn't want to start up unless they could get protection," and whether he had not offered $200 per month for previous information if a raid should happen to be in contemplation by officers of the law. While the defendant answered in the negative, the sheriff, in rebuttal, was permitted to testify to that as true. It is not disclosed in the testimony where this supposed still was located. Another still, referred to by the witnesses, was, we infer from the testimony of the defendant, about seven miles distant from the city of Laramie. In any event there is no showing whatever that the still, in reference to which the sheriff testified, had any connection whatever with the sale of liquor with which the defendant was charged. In the case of Heitman v. United States, (C.C.A.)
5. The defendant was also asked upon cross-examination whether or not he had not offered Mr. Connors, night sergeant *372 of police, money for protecting the Murphy place. Defendant denied this, but Connors was permitted to testify that defendant did so. The latter, upon direct examination, had been asked the following question: "Do you have any interest in the Murphy building or did you have at the time it was run as a soft drink parlor?" To which the defendant answered: "No sir." It is apparent, therefore, that counsel for defendant opened up the subject as to whether or not the defendant was interested in said building, and we are unable to see why the state should not have been permitted to cross-examine him thereon. Inasmuch as he deemed it evidently of importance to show that he had no interest in said building, we can see no reason why the state should not have been permitted to show the contrary, even though that might involve showing another crime. Because of the disposition made of this case, however, we shall state our view as to such testimony in case the defendant does not, upon another trial, open up the subject. Evidence to the effect that defendant offered to pay money for "protection" of the Murphy building, would undoubtedly be relevant, in case one of the ultimate questions to be determined were whether or not the defendant was interested in that building. Testimony that defendant offered such protection-money, might warrant the inference that the defendant was interested in such building, but could a further inference be legitimately drawn from the former inference that the defendant was present there and sold whiskey to H.O. Winkler, as charged in the information? For the testimony could have no possible bearing on this case unless it tended to show such presence of the defendant and the likelihood of his making the sales in question. Though the point may be debatable, we are inclined to believe that such latter inference cannot be drawn. Generally no presumption may be based upon another presumption and no inference upon another inference. 22 C.J. 84, 85.
6. One Andrew Berg, who conducted the soft-drink parlor in the Murphy building, was a witness on behalf of the *373 defendant. Upon his cross-examination by the state the following proceeding took place:
"Q. You are a defendant in this case, aren't you? Mr. Anderson: That is objected to. He is not a defendant in this case. If that were true he would not be here. Mr. Patterson: He was in this same transaction. Mr. Anderson: I ask the record to show that it is not true. Mr. Patterson: It certainly is. He is charged here with gambling. It is case No. 1512, the State of Wyoming v. Andrew Berg."
Andrew Berg is not a defendant in the case at bar. Judging from the statement of the prosecuting attorney, he was defendant in another case wherein he was charged with gambling, and the evident purpose of the prosecuting attorney was to discredit the witness in the eyes of the jury, and to convey to them the knowledge that he was charged with a crime. That such testimony elicited, either upon cross-examination or otherwise, is improper, was decided by this court in the case of Eads v. State,
7. Winkler had testified that the defendant gave him a "shot." He was then asked whether or not that "shot" was intoxicating liquor, and the question was objected to *374 on the ground that the witness had not shown himself to be qualified to answer. It is true that his competency as a witness in that respect had not been shown. He testified however that he became intoxicated as a result of the drinks sold and given him by the defendant. Another witness on behalf of the state, a chemist, testified that Winkler would not have become intoxicated unless the drinks given him contained more than one half of one per cent of alcohol. Whatever error there may have been in permitting the witness Winkler to testify as he did on the point in question, it was, we think, without prejudicial effect.
Without stating whether or not any of the errors herein pointed out would alone be sufficiently prejudicial so as to require a reversal, we think that justice will be best subserved in this case by reversing the judgment and remanding the cause for a new trial. It is so ordered.
Reversed and Remanded.
POTTER, C.J., and KIMBALL, J., concur.