134 S.E. 919 | W. Va. | 1926
Jankowski was convicted on an indictment charging him with the unlawful possession of moonshine liquor, and was sentenced to confinement of thirty days with labor, and to pay a fine of $100.00. He prosecutes error.
The defendant conducted a general store in a two-story frame building at the corner of Thompson Avenue and 14th Street in the City of Moundsville, where he also resided with his wife and several small children. The storeroom and a wareroom adjoining it, both facing the avenue, took up the floor space of the first floor, except in the rear of the wareroom defendant had constructed partitions making two smaller rooms which he used and occupied as kitchen and dining-room, respectively. The wareroom could be entered through a door in the partition separating it from the dining-room, also from the storeroom by a door through the partition separating them, and through a door from the front on the avenue. To the left of the wareroom was a hallway entrance to the second story up a stairway. The second floor space was divided into several rooms or apartments where defendant and family slept, the other rooms being for rental as apartments or to transient lodgers. At the time of the arrest, a Mrs. Purbola and her little girl were the only lodgers on the second floor, where they occupied three rooms. They had been there three days before the officers came to search the house for intoxicants. A stairway went up from the kitchen to the hallway on the second floor. The wareroom (where the moonshine whiskey was found) could only be entered from the front, from the storeroom, and from the dining-room. Several officers armed with a search warrant came to the building about *236 10 o'clock at night; entered the hallway from the avenue, ascended to the second floor, which some of them searched, while others descended the stairs into the kitchen at the rear and found defendant and his family. Upon search the officers found three-half gallon jars of moonshine liquor concealed between the ceiling of the wareroom and the floor of the second-story, which they reached by a stepladder found in the storeroom.
The defense was that defendant knew nothing about this liquor; that presumably some other person or persons unknown had concealed it there without the knowledge of defendant. Defendant denied any knowledge of the liquor, and the evidence on his behalf is that at the time the liquor was found, repairs were being made to the building, including the wareroom, by carpenters, electricians and painters, the inference being that these workmen may have concealed the liquor. Mrs. Purbola said that she had smelled the scent of liquor on one of the workmen who stood nearby her when she was in the storeroom a day or so before the arrest.
The main grounds of alleged error are: (1) the search warrant was void, and therefore all of the state's evidence obtained thereby, and objected to, was inadmissible; (2) the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict; and (3) the state's instructions were bad.
It is argued that the search warrant was illegal because it did not particularly describe the person to be searched. The search warrant, in substance, recites that complaint on oath had been made that John Doe on a certain date did in the county unlawfully manufacture, sell, expose intoxicating liquors, and that complainant had cause to believe and did believe that such liquor was being manufactured, sold, offered in that certain two-story frame building situate at the southeast corner of Thompson Avenue and 14th Street in the City of Moundsville, county and state aforesaid. Therefore, the officer to whom the warrant was addressed was commanded to apprehend said John Doe, and to enter and search the described premises and seize all liquors, bottles, and other apparatus apparently used in the unlawful traffic, and *237
to arrest all parties and persons found in said premises and bring them before the justice issuing the warrant or some other justice. The argument is, in substance, that all "John Doe" search warrants are void on their face. We have heretofore decided this contention in State v. McKeen,
Was the evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict? Can we say that the jury was justified in finding beyond all reasonable doubt that defendant had unlawful possession of the liquor? We have carefully inspected the evidence with that question in mind. We recognize and follow the rule established for generations and approved by experience, that great caution should be exercised by the courts in awarding a new trial when it is asked for on the ground that the verdict is without sufficient evidence to support it. Great weight is always given to the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the trial court in such cases; and the cases are rare in which the appellate court has interferred. It is done only where the evidence is plainly insufficient and justice is clearly defeated. *238
The weight of testimony and inferences to be drawn therefrom are peculiarly within the province of the jury, and if the new trial depends upon the weight of the testimony and the ilferences which may reasonably be drawn therefrom, the verdict will not be disturbed. State v. Winans,
State's instructions Nos. 1 and 2 are alleged to be erroneous and prejudicial, on the ground that the criminal intent in the possession of the liquor is left out. These instructions told the jury, in substance, that the possession of moonshine liquor was unlawful, and for one to have in his possession such liquor for personal use was as much a violation as to have it in possession for sale or any other unlawful purpose, and if they believed from the evidence beyond all reasonable doubt that defendant did have in his possession a quantity of moonshine liquor, "as charged in the indictment," then it was their duty to find him guilty. Defendant's counsel argues that the instructions are bad because they leave out the word "knowingly" before the words "did have in his possession". It is argued that it is not unlawful in all instances to have moon-shine *239
liquor in possession, as for instance where an officer has confiscated moonshine liquor to be produced as evidence. And we held in State v. Lambert,
The judgment will be affirmed.
*240Affirmed.