268 P. 571 | Wyo. | 1928
On December 22, 1923, B.V. Koontz, the Sheriff of Washakie County, Wyoming, received a call over the telephone from F.F. McFarlane, Deputy Sheriff of Hot Spring County, and was told that two men would be coming through the town of Worland with an automobile full of intoxicating liquor. Two men were described as driving the automobile, one as a fat, heavy-set man, and the other as a small man. After receiving the message, Koontz took steps to locate the car, should it come through the town, and with that in mind went to the Wild Bear Garage and subsequently to the Worland Garage. At the latter place he saw a car entering, driven by a boy, but two men were standing near the east side of the garage and near the front end thereof. These men corresponded to the description given over the telephone, looked at the sheriff, and seemed to him to be agitated, and he concluded that they were the owners or drivers of the car. The car was an open one, with no side-curtains, and as the sheriff passed it, he could see down in the rear of it and noticed a quilt which covered what appeared to him to be small kegs. He thereupon uncovered these kegs, and found some 25 gallons of whiskey. The two men above mentioned were arrested and are the defendant Ralph Kelly and one Thomas Smith. They admitted the ownership of the car and the whiskey, though the extent *458 of admissions of Kelly is in dispute. Both of the men were thereupon charged with the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor. Before the commencement of the trial, defendant Kelly made a motion to suppress the evidence obtained in connection with the search of the automobile above mentioned. Evidence was taken, and the court overruled the motion. Kelly was tried and convicted and sentenced to a term in jail and to pay a fine. From this conviction and sentence he appeals, and the main error assigned is the action of the court in overruling the motion above mentioned.
1. Section 26 of Chapter 117, Session Laws of 1921, provides that:
"Whenever any officer of the law shall discover any person in the act of transporting in violation of law, intoxicating liquors in any * * * automobile * * * or other vehicle, it shall be his duty to seize any and all intoxicating liquors found therein being transported contrary to law."
A similar statute was construed by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Carroll v. United States,
A case somewhat similar to that at bar is Moore v. State,
2. The defendant and Thomas Smith, the two men heretofore mentioned, were charged jointly with the possession of intoxicating liquor. Smith was not present at the trial, and before the commencement thereof, the defendant Kelly filed an affidavit for continuing the trial of the case on account of the absence of Smith, who was stated to be in Montana and that his evidence could be obtained within a reasonable time. The court denied the motion, and this action is assigned as error. The defendant was arrested on December 22, 1923; the foregoing affidavit was filed on April 2, 1925. It is stated in the affidavit that a subpoena was issued for Smith, but the date thereof is not shown. Nor has any showing been made that an attempt had been made to take Smith's deposition. The defendant had sixteen months' time in which to obtain the testimony mentioned. If he was not able to get it within that time, there is no great likelihood *461
that he could have done so within a reasonable time after the filing of the affidavit. Further, it would seem, on the face of the record, that the testimony of Smith, who, it is alleged, would testify that he had possession of the liquor in question and that Kelly had nothing to do with it, would have incriminated himself, and it may be doubtful that he would have done that. We think that in accordance with Keffer v. State,
3. The defendant argues that there was not sufficient testimony in the case upon which to convict him. But that argument is based upon the premise that the evidence obtained through and in connection with the search and seizure hereinbefore mentioned was not admissible. That point has been ruled against him, and the argument as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict must fall with it.
We think that the judgment herein should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
RINER, J., and CROMER, District Judge, concur. *462