244 N.W. 389 | S.D. | 1932
Defendant F.A. Roberts and his wife, Mable, were jointly informed against upon a charge of having intoxicating liquor in possession with intent to violate the law. The date of the offense was stated as January 26, 1931. Both pleaded not guilty, and were tried together. Defendant and his wife were operating a restaurant business at Oldham in this state; the restaurant being conducted on the first floor of a certain building and a hotel or rooming house above. There is some question in the record as to who was really the proprietor of the business. The lease of the premises ran to the wife, Mable, and defendant claimed that the business was hers, although he assisted her to some extent in the operation thereof.
There was some evidence in the record (denied by defendant) purporting to show that he had sold intoxicating liquor on several occasions in the latter part of December, 1930. It appears also that some testimony was introduced with reference to a search of the premises by officers with a search warrant on *364 January 26, 1931, the date charged in the information. From this testimony, it seems that the search was made in the evening of that day. The officers found some small empty bottles which might conceivably have contained liquor at some time or other, but there was no testimony whatever that they contained liquor or traces thereof when found. The only testimony that might tend to prove in any way the actual finding of any liquor at the time of the search was the fact that, while the officers were searching the restaurant premises on the first floor, some person unknown threw a glass container of some kind out of a second story window of the building. This glass container was picked up by a bystander, not one of the officers. The officers claim that this bystander stated to them a day or two later that what he had picked up was a bottle containing some liquor. The bystander himself, however, denied this, and, when testifying at the trial, stated that the only thing he found or picked up was a broken glass which had no smell or trace of liquor about it. However, this may be, it is admitted that on the day of the search and at the time thereof the defendant was not in the town of Oldham at all, but was at Andeberg, S.D., some miles away, so that whatever may have been thrown out of the window was not so thrown by the defendant.
For some reason (doubtless entirely adequate but not disclosed by the record), the trial judge struck out and withdrew from the consideration of the jury all testimony of the officers as to what they did or saw while conducting the search of January 26, 1931, together with all the empty bottle exhibits procured by them in their raid. The court instructed the jury (to which instructions no exceptions were taken) that they could not convict the defendants unless they found as a fact that the defendants, on January 26, 1931, had intoxicating liquor in possession with intent to violate the law, and that they could only consider evidence of prior sales by the defendant F.A. Roberts in connection with determining his intent in having possession of liquor on January 26, 1931, if they found as a fact that he did have liquor in possession on January 26. The jury acquitted the defendant Mable Roberts and convicted the defendant F.A. Roberts, and from judgment entered upon said verdict and a denial of his motion for new trial he has now appealed. *365
[1-3] Appellant makes substantially the same point by two contentions. He maintains that the verdict was in disregard of the instructions, and therefore should be set aside, and further urges that the evidence was insufficient to sustain any verdict under the instructions. It is the law of this state that instructions unexcepted to become the law of the case, and a verdict in disregard thereof should be set aside on motion for a new trial. Gartner v. Mohan,
[4, 5] After the jury had retired, they came back requesting some further light from the court, and the trial judge, in the absence of appellant and without notice to appellant or his counsel, gave some additional instructions and explained his previous instructions to some extent without in any manner settling the same and in entire disregard of rule 25 for trial courts which provides that "the court shall in no case qualify, modify or in any manner explain to the jury any written instructions then or theretofore given unless such qualification, modification or explanation shall first have been reduced to writing and made a part of such instruction and settled."
The foregoing rule applies both to civil and criminal actions. Rule 45, Trial Courts. We have quite recently (Heyl v. Waggoner, *366
The judgment and order appealed from must be, and they are, reversed.
All the Judges concur. *367