142 S.E. 250 | W. Va. | 1928
The defendant was found guilty under a warrant charging him with possession of moonshine liquor. He protests the verdict on the ground that it is contrary to the law and the evidence, and that the jury was not extended permission (on his motion) to taste the liquid, the possession of which was charged to him by the State.
The defendant was proprietor of the Washington Hotel in the city of Logan. An officer of the law testified that upon a search of the hotel, he saw the defendant with a pitcher and something that looked like a small glass in his hands; and that defendant threw the pitcher into the kitchen sink, and then "reached up on a shelf ", and when he withdrew his hand there were two small "dram" glasses on the shelf. Another witness saw the defendant coming from the kitchen, and the officer following him with the pitcher. Several witnesses testified that from the odor of the fluid in the pitcher they were of opinion it was moonshine liquor. The pitcher and its contents were introduced in evidence, and handed to the jury for examination. The defendant denied being in the kitchen, denied having had the pitcher in his hand, and denied possession as well as knowledge of the liquid in the pitcher. One of his witnesses stated that he saw a man named Louie put moonshine liquor into a teapot before the defendant came to the hotel that morning; that he (the witness), Louie and another drank all of it, except a few drops which Louie threw into the dishwater; that Louie then ran some water into the teapot, and that it was the same vessel which was introduced in evidence by the State. *283
In reviewing conflicting testimony, we must give preference to that which favors the verdict. Wilson v. Johnson,
*284Judgment affirmed.