199 P. 278 | Mont. | 1921
prepared the opinion for the court.
The defendant was convicted in the district court of Custer county of a violation of the prohibition law. Subsequently his motion for a new trial was granted, and the state has appealed from that order.
It appears in the evidence that at various times between January 21 and February 1, 1919, one Charles Marsant had gone to the store of the defendant in Miles City and purchased liquor. These various transactions were consummated by the ingenious method of the purchaser laying his money on the counter and the defendant placing the bottles of whisky on the floor at the end of the counter, so the purchaser could help himself, the defendant evidently figuring that if he did not hand the bottles of liquor directly to the' purchaser he would thereby evade the law, even though in each instance he received the money. The defendant charged seventy-five cents for each six-ounce bottle of the liquor. On the first day of February, and after several purchases had previously been made from the defendant, the sheriff gave Marsant four dollars in silver, so marked as to be later identified, with which Marsant was to buy whisky from Stein. Marsant did buy the whisky from the defendant, and that same night, acting under authority of a search-warrant, the sheriff, with his assistants, raided and searched the store of the defendant and procured a quantity of whisky and one silver dollar, which was identified as one of the marked coins earlier given to Marsant. The record contains evidence of one other witness who testified to buying liquor from the defendant about the same time and under similar circumstances. The defendant predicated his
“That affiant then stated to the said Champ, ‘It is a fact then that for the past year, or ever since your friend was charged two dollars interest on that eight dollar loan on his watch by Mr. Stein, you have never had any use for Stein,’
D. F. Simmons, also a Burns detective, makes affidavit in corroboration of Cooper.
For tbe reasons given in tbe foregoing opinion, it is ordered that tbe order of tbe lower court granting a new trial be reversed, and tbe cause remanded to tbe district court of Custer county, witb directions to enforce judgment upon tbe verdict of conviction.
Rebearing denied September 26, 1921.