109 Wash. 17 | Wash. | 1919
On April 5, 1919, the appellant was charged, by information in the superior court for Pierce county, as follows:
“That the said Mike Franich, in the county of Pierce, in the state of Washington, on or about the 4th day of April, nineteen hundred and nineteen, then and there being, unlawfully did have in his possession intoxicating liquor other than alcohol, to wit: moonshine whiskey, he, the said Mike Franich, not then and there being a regularly ordained clergyman, priest or rabbi actually engaged in ministering to a religious congregation. ’ ’
On the day named in the information, two deputy sheriffs of Pierce county went to the home of appellant and proceeded to make a search therein for an
Appellant first contends, “The evidence is not only insufficient, but it is wholly lacking. The evidence utterly fails to establish moonshine whiskey.”
Appellant’s second contention is that the state failed to prove that appellant was not a clergyman, priest or rabbi, actually engaged in ministering to a religious congregation, and that, without such proof, the appellant is within the justification for possession of the liquor found in § 12, ch. 19, Laws of 1917, p. 61. There is authority for the contention that the exception contained in the statute must be negatived by the prosecution, because the exception is contained in and is such an inherent part of the definition of the offense
“Similar in result to the effect of presumptions is the effect of peculiar knowledge possessed by one party of the evidentiary facts which the other party claims would, if brought forward, tend to sustain the claim of the latter. In such case, if the party possessed of such knowledge fails to bring forward the facts which it is shown can be produced by him alone, a presumption arises in favor of his adversary’s claim.”
We have just decided the same question contrary to appellant’s contention in State v. Harding, 108 Wash. 606, 185 Pac. 579, and that case is controlling.
The evidence introduced by the state, as recited herein, to prove the chargei was competent to make a prima facie case, and not being in any respect met or controverted by the appellant, was sufficient basis for the verdict.
There is therefore no merit in the claim of appellant that there was no evidence sufficient to justify the conviction. '
Judgment affirmed.
Mount, Tolman, Bridges, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.