9 N.W.2d 734 | Minn. | 1943
On Sunday morning, November 8, 1942, two police officers observed defendant parking his car in front of an apartment building. They had been informed "that a man was to make delivery there." They observed defendant getting out of his car, entering the building, and ascending a stairway. One of the policemen followed him and confronted him as he came through the door of an apartment in the building with bills of money in his hand. He admitted to the officer that "he was doing a little overtime delivery." The officers searched the car and found in the body of it three cases of assorted whiskeys. Examination of the trunk of the car disclosed three more such cases. Defendant's explanation, that "he was delivering or selling liquor was because of the fact that he did not want to be on relief; he wanted to support himself and his daughter," admits guilty possession. Searching defendant, one of the officers found two additional pints of whiskey in his pockets. Defendant discreetly refrained from testifying.
His principal claim here is that the evidence was insufficient to prove that the liquor so found in his possession, under the circumstances here disclosed, was for the purpose of sale. Section 1 of the ordinance provides:
"No person * * * shall sell, exchange, barter, dispose of or keep for sale any intoxicating liquor * * * without first having obtained a license." It defines the words "sale" and "sell" as including "all barters and all manners or means of furnishing intoxicating *322 liquor or liquors, including the selling, exchange, barter, disposition of or keeping for sale such intoxicating liquor."
We are in full accord with the trial court's finding of guilt. As said in the recent case of State v. Ronnenberg,
Affirmed.