81 W. Va. 441 | W. Va. | 1917
At the April term in 1917 of the criminal court of Payette county, Lillian Tincher was convicted of the unlawful sale of liquors at her residence in a village of some five hundred persons; and upon the verdict was imposed a sentence of fine and imprisonment. At the time of the arrest, eleven pints of intoxicants were found by the officers at the place where the proof tends to show the alleged sale was made. Such possession was admitted by the accused; and Marvin Wills for the state testified that a few days prior to the arrest he purchased from her one pint of whiskey.'
Without substantial conflict, the decisions sustain the validity of statutes making possession of liquor, under the same general or similar circumstances, prima facie or presumptive evidence of unlawful sale or storage, and imposing
In Parsons v. State, supra, it was held the legislature may, in an act regulating the sale of intoxicants, provide that possession thereof by one not authorized to sell them, shall be “presumptive evidence of a violation” of the act, 'and hence of itself sufficient to support a conviction, unless the person charged shall satisfactorily account for and explain the possession; and that such a statute is not violative of the constitutional provision that no person shall .in, any criminal cases be compelled to give evidence against himself on be denied the right of trial by jury. But to have this effect the possession must be established by competent evidence. Such a rule existed in the trial of many criminal cases at common law, and there seems to be no legal principle or constitutional provision inhibiting a legislature from enacting a law incorporating the same into a statute. In Ex parte Woodward, 181 Ala. 107, it was said that the accused may introduce, in negation of the mere prima facie presumption the statute raises, every fact and circumstance attending or relating to the keeping of the forbidden liquors. Obviously, the chief object of the statutory rule is to require more than the mere general denial of an intent to keep the liquors for unlawful purposes. The presumption is evidentiary, not conclusive. The jury may or may not accept it as conclusive of guilt. They may disregard it as insufficient upon that question.
The statute construed in State v. Barrett, 138 N. C. 630, made possession of more than one quart of liquor prima facie evidence of an intent to violate the prohibition against illegal sales; and, lilmwise, it was held not to be an unconstitutional invasion of the province of the judiciary, or a deprivation of
The same evidentiary rule has been applied, as stated, upon the trial of indictments for many common law offenses. Frequently, when it appears that property has been stolen and recently thereafter found in the exclusive possession of the person charged with the theft, the law makes it his duty to show how he obtained it, and if he fails to do so the jury may properly infer that his possession was dishonest and from this and other incriminatory circumstances conclude that he was the thief. And where property so possessed is identified as belonging to the owner of a building recently burglarized and as taken from it the same presumption or inference arises; and, while generally the possession alone may not be sufficient to warrant conviction of the burglary, it may with other proof be sufficient to establish larceny of the goods taken. The duty to account for the possession is the same in each instance. Indeed, there is a general consensus of opinion that a legislature may prescribe rules of evidence, declare what proof may and may not be admitted, and, when admitted, what force and effect shall be accorded to it; the only restriction or limitation, being that the rules prescribed shall not infringe upon the rights guaranteed by the constitution. See 1 Wigmore Ev., §7.
There is no such infringement in an act regulating or forbidding sale of intoxicants, drugs, poisons or other hurtful liquids, and declaring that, possession thereof by one not au
Between the fact proved as the basis of the presumption and the main fact involved, the guilt of the accused, it is essential that there be some substantial correlation or natural connection; and the inference of guilt from the existence of the fact proved, out of which the presumption arises, must not be unreasonable, strained.or extraordinary. People v. Carmen, 139 N. Y. 32. Furthermore, upon the prosecution rests the burden of-proving the existence of both facts — the basis of the inference and th.e guilt of the accused; for, while proof of the presence of concealed liquors upon the premises occupied by him imposes the duty on.defendant to meet and negative the prima facie case so established, it is not incumbent upon him to assume the burden of proving his innocence on the case as a whole. That fact must still be proved by evidence on behalf of the state sufficient to convince the jury beyond reasonable doubt, subject to the qualification that possession of the concealed intoxicants remains sufficient evidence of guilt until explained consistently with law. And its probative force or effect is not destroyed by a bare denial of unlawful intent. But, after introduction by the accused of proof tending to show its lawfulness, the custody goes to the jury, with the other evidence in the case, as an element of proof of the charge averred in the indictment. These principles are sustained by the cases cited, and especially by State v. Wilkerson, 79 N. C. 888. Hence, if the instruction is amenable to criticism at all, its faultiness lies in the concluding clause, saying the “burden” rests upon defendant “to show that the liquors were not being kept and disposed of in violation of the law”. Perhaps it should not
By the only other assignment, defendant claims the benefit of any error against her committed by the trial court in the admission of testimony regarding disorderly conduct along the public highway near to and in front of the premises occupied by her wherein the liquors were found. With this conduct the testimony complained of did not connect her directly or inferentially. It did not occur upon her premises. There is no proof even tending to show that any of the persons so engaged were upon her property at any time, went to or from her residence, or carried therefrom any liquors, or that she sold the liquors or ,was in anywise responsible for the difficult, circumstances which the authorities say are necessary to render proof of.such conduct admissible. Joyce on Int. Liq., §672; Woollen & Thornton on Int. Liq. §§926, 927. Proof of efforts to conceal sales, of attempts to effect secrecy, the frequency with which persons addicted to the use of intoxicants visited the premises of the accused, their presence there in an intoxicated condition, or the bringing in of liquors in unusual quantities, is admissible; but, without some such proximate or causal connection, there is no basis for an inference of guilt, in the absence of other proof of sales.
To what extent th'e testimony so admitted may have influenced the verdict, no one but members of the jury that rendered it can know; and they may not have been conscious of its actual influence. They may have considered the testimony of Wills of itself sufficient to show an actual sale of liquors to him by defendant under the circumstances detailed by
For this reason, our order will reverse the judgment and grant a new trial.
Reversed, verdict set aside, remanded for new trial.