Defendant was convicted in the criminal court of Marion county and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary and fined, on an indictment for unlawfully and feloniously owning, operating, maintaining, possessing, and having an interest in, etc., a moonshine still. A writ of error having been refused by the circuit court of said county, defendant prosecutes error to this Court.
On or about four o'clock in the afternoon of December 12, 1925, E. L. Hawkins, a Federal prohibition officer, together with state trooper Gladwell and certain other officers, being in possession of a warrant issued on the information of Gladwell for the search of the house and premises of defendant, proceeded to Peacock Terrace, a suburb of Fairmont, for the purpose of executing the same. On alighting from the car, they were at once apprised by the odor present that a moonshine still was under operation in the immediate vicinity. And, by means of the increasing pungency of this odor near the dwelling they were led into the house and upstairs to the bathroom where a sixty gallon moonshine still was found in operation, and where, as one officer puts it, "The fumes of the odor from it was so strong we could hardly stay in the room." The still was actually going at the time and the liquor from the coil was dripping into a bucket and wash boiler. According to Gladwell: "The hot plate was setting down in the bathtub and the still was setting on the hot plate. There was a rubber hose running from the hot plate to a gas connection. The gas was turned on and burning. The still was filled up *Page 349 with mash. There was a rubber hose running in at the top and the water running out and running into the bathtub under the still and then running down the drain pipe. The liquor was running from the still into charcoal, and from that into a copper wash boiler setting there." Twenty-three gallons of apple brandy whiskey, three full barrels of apple mash, five empty mash barrels, 200 pounds brown sugar, ten empty whiskey cans, two funnels, one copper wash boiler used to catch whiskey in, three pieces rubber hose used on the still, and several small kettles and dippers were also found in the house. Defendant was not present at the time. However, he was soon after apprehended on his way home, and after reaching the house, said to one of the officers, "Well, boys, you got me. I am in a hell of a shape with this stuff on me." He did not testify.
The principal ground of error stressed is that the search warrant is invalid. We have said that on the question of its validity the warrant itself is the best evidence.State v. Slat,
From the evidence, we find that as the officers alighted from their car, odor from a moonshine still in operation was in evidence. Hawkins, stated "As soon as we got out of the car, I smelled the odor of a still in operation." This was outside the close of the defendant. The officers were unerringly led by means of the growing intensity of this odor to the still in operation in the house of the defendant. An offense can be said to be committed in the presence of an officer when he sees it with his own eyes or sees one or more series of acts constituting the offense, and is aided by his other senses.State v. Lutz,
That the officer may act on this one sense is no longer an open question in this State. In State v. Snodgrass,
According to these authorities, it is plain that the officers, upon the information coming to them through one of the senses upon alighting from the car that a felony was being committed within the house, had a right to act as they did act, without a warrant. Then, it follows as a matter of course they would stand in the same position even if the warrant held by them was an invalid one. With the knowledge of the commission of a felony being committed in their presence the necessity of a search warrant ended.
Defendant also contends that instruction No. 2, given for the State, completely ignores the question of intent as an element of the crime charged in the indictment, while his instruction No. 9, refused, would have presented that question *Page 352
to the jury. By State's instruction No. 1, the jury were told that it was unlawful for any person to own, operate, maintain or have in his possession, or have any interest in any apparatus for the manufacture of intoxicating liquors, commonly known as a moonshine still, and if they believed from all the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant owned, operated, maintained or had in his possession, or had any interest in a moonshine still, as charged in the indictment, then they should find the defendant guilty. The indictment charged the defendant with unlawfully and feloniously owning, operating, maintaining, possessing and having an interest in a certain apparatus, mechanism and device, for the manufacture of intoxicating liquors. The indictment which was made an essential part of the instruction No. 1 by reference thereto, must be read in connection therewith. State v. Whitecotton,
Affirmed.