7 S.W.2d 340 | Mo. | 1928
Appellant was convicted in the Circuit Court of Audrain County of the felony of selling intoxicating liquor, to-wit, "hootch, moonshine and corn whiskey," as defined by Section 21, Laws 1923, page 242. The jury assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for a term of five years. From the judgment entered on the verdict of the jury, appellant was granted an appeal to this court.
At our last October term, an opinion was handed down reversing the judgment and remanding the cause on account of the admission of certain evidence. Upon motion of the State a rehearing was granted. The case has been reargued and resubmitted at the present term. The facts are fully and fairly set out in our former opinion, from which we quote as follows: *177
"The prosecuting attorney observed one George Adams, known to be an habitual user of intoxicating liquor, standing near his automobile in the city of Mexico. Thereupon the prosecuting attorney and the sheriff, taking Adams with them, drove to a point in the city of Mexico close to the residence of defendant. The prosecuting attorney thereupon handed Adams two one-dollar bills. Adams alighted from the machine, going in the direction of defendant's residence, the sheriff following him and observing Adams enter upon the premises, but from his position he was unable to see him enter defendant's house. Shortly thereafter the sheriff saw Adams leave defendant's house, meeting him on the street, Adams showing him the impression of a bottle inside his shirt. The sheriff and Adams returned by different routes to the automobile stationed a block or so away, Adams delivering the pint bottle half full of whiskey to the prosecuting attorney. The incident occurred about seven-thirty P.M. on September 18, 1926. Upon obtaining the bottle of whiskey from Adams the prosecuting attorney immediately went to his office and procured a search warrant to search defendant's house, which was executed by the sheriff, accompanied by two policemen, where, after a continued search, nine bottles of whiskey were found in the basement in a clapboard partition constituting a side of the coal bin. While the officers were making the search, but before anything was found, the defendant remarked, `You are just out of luck. I did have some whiskey here in a jug, but it is all gone now.' Upon the arrest of defendant and while detained in the waiting room at the jail, defendant, upon observing Adams, said to him, `So this is your game, is it?' Adams admitted that he had previously been convicted of issuing a check without funds in the bank to meet it. He also admitted he was in the habit of drinking large quantities of whiskey.
"The defendant refused to take the stand, but offered several witnesses who testified that the general reputation of Adams for truth and veracity was bad."
There is no doubt that the testimony of Adams that he purchased the liquor from appellant, supported by the testimony of the sheriff tending to corroborate Adams as to entering and leaving appellant's premises, together with proof of the character of the liquor purchased, was sufficient to authorize submission of the case to the jury. Appellant insists that the only proof of the sale rests in testimony procured by the entrapment of appellant and that this testimony was improperly admitted and that, without such testimony, no case was made for the jury. We are satisfied with our former opinion on this point and quote from it as follows:
"The evidence in this regard goes no further than showing that the prosecuting attorney accosted the witness, drove him near defendant's residence and gave him two one-dollar bills, Adams immediately *178
going to defendant's home and returning with a bottle of moonshine whiskey. If entrapment may ever be said to constitute a defense in this State, the facts here developed are not appropriate to such a defense. It is evident from the reading of the record that the purpose of the prosecuting attorney was not to solicit the commission of an offense, but it was to ascertain if defendant was engaged in vending whiskey. Adams, acting as a decoy, merely furnished the opportunity for the commission of the offense. The officers did not actively or by ruse induce defendant to commit an offense, nor did they have anything to do with the furnishing of whiskey by defendant. The record contains no evidence that defendant was induced to sell by entreaty, lure or false statements tending to show a dire need on the part of Adams for whiskey. It has been said to be the general rule in liquor cases that intent is not a necessary element of the offense and that the defense of entrapment in general has no application to cases involving the sale of intoxicating liquor. [State v. Broaddus,
Appellant contends that the proof of the discovery of several bottles of whiskey and a number of empty whiskey bottles, by the search made subsequent to, but the same night of, the alleged sale, was erroneously admitted for the consideration of the jury. In our former opinion we agreed with appellant as to this assignment and for that reason ordered the judgment reversed and the cause sent back for a new trial. Being persuaded of the probable incorrectness of our conclusion in that respect, we granted a rehearing. The question has been thoroughly rebriefed by appellant and the State, and is the main question for decision.
A search warrant was promptly and regularly issued immediately after the sale and no complaint is made that the search made thereunder, within an hour or two after the alleged sale, was not fully authorized. But it is contended that the discovery of the liquor in appellant's basement tended to show another and different crime than that of selling "moonshine" charged in the information and that the fact that appellant unlawfully had possession of such liquor had no legitimate tendency to establish the crime of selling such liquor, which was the charge against appellant, and that proof of such discovery served no purpose in the case, except to prejudice the jury improperly against the appellant.
Counsel for appellant has cited quite an imposing array of authorities to this proposition. We have examined them all and find that most of them are clearly distinguishable on their facts. In State v. Saunders,
It is manifest that the facts in the foregoing cases are so dissimilar to those in the case at bar that the rulings made therein, that it was improper to show that the respective defendants committed other crimes, are not controlling here.
In State v. Hedrick, 296 S.W. (Mo.) 152, a case cited by appellant, where the charge was selling liquor, the court ruled that proof by the State in rebuttal that empty bottles with whiskey odor were found on defendant's person when he was arrested, was not prejudicial, even if erroneously admitted, because defendant had previously *180 admitted such possession. In such state of the record, the suggestion made by this court that the proof would have been improper because it tended to show a different offense, wasobiter, for the record clearly shows that no objection was made to the proof on the ground that it tended to show the commission of another crime.
The case of State v. Gruber, 285 S.W. (Mo.) 426, cited by appellant, is not in point. Even if it was in point, it would not aid appellant. It was a case of rape of a girl under the age of consent. It was held that proof that defendant aided in procuring an abortion upon prosecutrix was admissible as tending to show an attempt on defendant's part to conceal the crime of rape.
In Beyer v. United States, 282 F. 225, cited by appellant, defendant was charged with selling liquor on June 19, 1920. He denied making such sale and said that he had sold no liquor since prohibition went into effect. He was then asked by the district attorney if a seizure of liquor had not been made in his place on March 10, 1920, which was four months before the date of the alleged sale on which he was being tried. Government witnesses in rebuttal were permitted to testify to the previous finding of liquor in defendant's cafe. It was held that possession of liquor by defendant at another and different time was irrelevant to and immaterial upon the issue on trial, and that defendant could not be contradicted upon an immaterial matter, and that the Government was bound by his answer denying the fact of such seizure.
In Rosenerance v. State, 239 Pac. (Wyo.) 952, cited by appellant, the defendant was prosecuted for selling moonshine whiskey. Proof that defendant was conducting a gambling den and that he had offered to pay the officers for protection in the conduct of that illegitimate business and that he operated a still at some place not shown was held improperly admitted. It is significant that the court said: "No connection between the still in question in the case at bar and the crime charged against the defendant having been shown, we think that the testimony in relation to the still, both upon cross-examination of the defendant and upon examination of the sheriff, should have been excluded."
In the Texas case cited by appellant, Webb v. State,
In the case at bar the sale was made at about 7:30 o'clock in the evening. That same evening, and as soon thereafter as a search warrant could be procured, the search of appellant's home was commenced and, after considerable time and only because of a very careful second search, the whiskey and empty bottles were finally discovered. The inference that the whiskey was hid in the basement of the house at the time appellant made the sale in that house is wellnigh irresistible. The jury clearly had the right to draw such an inference. The presence of the liquor in the house was a circumstance corroborating the testimony of George Adams as to the fact of the sale by appellant. The evidence of the presence of whiskey in appellant's house was admissible for that purpose. The mere fact that such evidence also tended to prove that appellant was guilty of the offense of illegally having intoxicating liquor in his possession does not make the evidence inadmissible in so far as it properly tends to corroborate the proof of the State that defendant illegally sold liquor in the house.
Respondent has cited us to no Missouri case squarely in point on the facts. In State v. White,
Respondent cites State v. Fenley,
Respondent cites numerous cases outside of Missouri tending to support the action of the trial court in admitting in evidence proof of the discovery of whiskey in appellant's basement shortly after the sale. In Harwell v. State, 68 So. (Ala. Ct. App.) 500, l.c. 503, the search was made a few days after the sale. In Craig v. State, 70 S.E. (Ga. Ct. App.) 974, the search was made months after the sale, yet the liquor discovered was held to have been properly admitted. In Martoni v. State, 167 S.W. (Tex. Ct. Cr. App.) 349, the whiskey was found in defendant's room soon after the sale. In Patton v. State, 145 S.W. (Tex. Ct. Cr. App.) 1189, the sheriff searched defendant's place of business after the sale, but upon the same day, and found the whiskey. It was also shown that defendant had whiskey in his possession prior to the sale. In State v. Legendre, 96 Atl. (Va.) 9, the whiskey in defendant's possession was found thirteen days after the sale. In Holmes v. State, 77 S.E. (Ga. Ct. App.) 187, empty bottles and bottles containing whiskey were found on defendant's promises. It does not clearly appear from the opinion that this discovery was made after the sale, but it is reasonable to assume so. In Reynolds v. State, 42 So. (Fla.) 373, proof that empty jugs, smelling strongly of whiskey and found upon his premises at the time of defendant's arrest after the sale, was held to have been properly admitted. In Smith v. State, 77 S.E. (Ga. Ct. App.) 651, it was shown that full and empty whiskey bottles were found on defendant's premises.
Respondent cites numerous other cases, but these will suffice. It was held in each of the cases above mentioned that the proof of the discovery of liquor upon defendant's premises or upon his person at a time other than the precise time when the sale was made was properly admitted. The theory upon which such proof was admitted was that it tended to corroborate the proof of the sale and that such proof was admissible, notwithstanding the fact that it may have tended to show defendant guilty of a separate and independent offense. Corpus Juris lays down the general rule as follows: "Evidence of contemporaneous possession of intoxicating liquor is admissible in corroboration of the proof of sale regardless of whether such possession does, or does not, constitute a distinct offense." [16 C.J. 606, sec. 1174.]
Appellant had the full and empty whiskey bottles artfully concealed in the basement of his house, where such whiskey when needed would be easy of access by one familiar with the hiding place and the method of concealment. The discovery of the whiskey in appellant's house so soon after the sale justifies the inference that appellant had the whiskey in his house at the time of the sale. We therefore hold that the proof of such discovery tended to corroborate the story of witness Adams, upon which the State depended *183 to establish the sale. Such proof tends to show that appellant was engaged in the business of selling whiskey. The court did not err in admitting this evidence.
It was urged in appellant's original brief that: "The verdict of the jury inflicted cruel and unusual punishment upon the defendant in violation of Section 25, Article 2 of the Constitution of the State of Missouri." The punishment assessed by the jury was within the limits fixed by the statute and hence is neither cruel nor unusual within the constitutional provision invoked. The assignment is without merit.
The verdict of the jury is assailed as being the result of bias and prejudice against the defendant. The only possible basis for such assignment is the fact that the jury assessed the maximum punishment of five years. That fact alone is insufficient to prove bias and prejudice. We have frequently so ruled. Citation of authorities is unnecessary.
The information follows the language of Section 21, Laws 1923, page 242, which sets forth all the elements of the crime, to-wit, that, if any person shall sell "hootch," "moonshine," "corn whiskey," he shall be deemed guilty of a felony. The information is substantially in the form approved in State v. Combs, 273 S.W. (Mo.) 1037, and is sufficient.
The verdict is in proper form and is responsive to the charge contained in the information. It is sufficient to support the judgment, which, in due and appropriate form, was later entered thereon.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed. All concur.