209 N.W. 474 | Iowa | 1926
The defendant was tried and convicted in the court below of the crime of maintaining a liquor nuisance. The court sentenced him to confinement in the county jail for a term of one year. The exceptions argued are numerous, but we deem it necessary to discuss only a part of them.
I. Elmer Hammond, who was one of the judges of election of Knoxville Township at the general election held in Marion County, November 4, 1924, was certified by the judges of election for jury service. This fact was unknown to the 1. JURY: defendant and his attorneys, and, apparently, to competency: everyone else connected with the trial of the waiver. case, until after the verdict was returned by the jury. Hammond was one of the jurors who heard the case. A new trial was asked, upon the ground that the board did not have authority to certify Hammond as a juror, and that he was not legally a member of the panel. Section 10869, Code of 1924, requires judges of election to certify to the jury list, and that, according to their knowledge and belief, the same contains the name of no person "* * * 10. (In counties not having an appointive jury system.) Who is a judge or clerk at this election. * * *"
Under the former statute, Section 337, Code Supplement, 1913, the fact that a juror served as a judge or clerk of election at the election at which the jury list was selected and certified, was ground for challenge for cause. This provision was omitted from the Code of 1924, and is not included among the grounds enumerated in Section 13830 for challenges to jurors for cause. We will assume that counsel for appellant examined the jurors on their voir dire, and elicited such facts from each of them as he deemed sufficient to enable him to determine their fitness to serve as jurors in the particular case. The juror testified, in his examination after the verdict was returned, that he did not know that his name was on the jury list when it was certified. There is nothing in the record to in any way suggest prejudice to the defendant. It was, of course, the duty of the judges of election to observe carefully the requirements of the statute. So far as anything is shown by the record, appellant might have excused the juror; and we think it may safely be assumed that the right *350
to challenge him, either for cause or peremptorily, was waived. Appellant cannot now complain. Goldthorp v. Goldthorp,
II. A motion for a directed verdict was filed at the close of the evidence for the State, and renewed at the close of all the evidence. The motion was based largely upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to justify a conviction. It is true that the record does not disclose direct 2. INTOXICATING evidence of sales by appellant of intoxicating LIQUORS: liquors, but the circumstances clearly indicate nuisance: that such was his business, and the evidence is evidence: abundant to sustain the conviction. A large sufficiency. quantity of alcohol, together with other indicia of the unlawful business, was introduced, and the defendant was observed by the officers who were watching him, to surreptitiously place a bottle filled with alcohol by a post in a dark alley, and was immediately arrested, and the liquor seized. The explanation made by him of his presence in the alley was inconsistent with the testimony of the officers, and he denied placing the bottle by the post. This denial created a conflict in the evidence, which it was the especial province of the jury to determine. Certain exhibits were admitted in evidence over the objection of appellant. The admission of these exhibits is referred to in the motion to direct a verdict, and also assigned as a ground for reversal. The exhibits were properly identified, and, while some of them may have been entitled to little weight as evidence, nevertheless their admission was not erroneous. The motion to direct a verdict was properly overruled.
III. Several instructions were requested by the defendant and refused by the court. No proper exceptions were preserved to this 3. CRIMINAL ruling made by the court. Section 11495, Code of LAW: trial 1924; Anthony v. O'Brien,
IV. Exceptions were also preserved to Instructions 3 and 6. The criticism of Instruction 3 is hypercritical and without merit. The exceptions preserved to Instruction 6 present the *351 4. INTOXICATING only debatable question in the case. The LIQUORS: appellant interprets this instruction as nuisance: permitting the jury to presume defendant's guilt unusual from the presence of an unusual or unreasonable quantity in quantity of intoxicating liquor in his residence. residence. The last clause of the instruction, if considered alone, and separately from the rest of the paragraph, would seem to afford some support to appellant's contention. When it is read, however, as a part of the entire instruction, we think that the jury could not have been misled by it. It is conceded that, at the time of the trial, Section 2427 of the Code of 1897 had been repealed; and, if the instruction was open to the interpretation placed upon it by the appellant, a reversal might be necessary. The court specifically instructed the jury that the defendant had the right to have and keep intoxicating liquors in his home for his own use, and that the finding of some quantity therein would not of itself justify a presumption that same was kept for illegal sale. The jury was also told that, in determining whether the liquor was designed and intended for personal use only, it might take into consideration the quantity, — that is, whether unusual or unreasonable, — and, from all the facts and circumstances shown, determine the true purpose and intention of the defendant. Had the court said that the presence of an unusual or unreasonable quantity of intoxicating liquor in the defendant's residence might be sufficient, with the other facts and circumstances, to permit a finding that they were kept for the purpose of illegal sale, there could have been no objection to the instruction. This, we think, was fairly its meaning, when carefully considered as a whole, and in connection with the other paragraphs of the charge. The proof is quite conclusive of guilt, and that the residence was used as a place for storage and sale.
V. It is also urged by counsel in appellant's behalf that the punishment inflicted is unreasonable and excessive. It is true that the sentence is somewhat severe; but, if appellant's conviction was justified by the evidence, as we think it was, he was deliberately engaged in systematically and persistently violating the law. The language of this court in State v.Hillman,
Since we find no error in the record, the judgment is —Affirmed.
De GRAFF, C.J., and FAVILLE and VERMILION, JJ., concur.