263 P. 1042 | Kan. | 1928
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was arrested by the city marshal of Almena while driving a car in which there was a glass jug containing intoxicating liquor. He plead guilty in the police court to the charge of being drunk. He was later charged by the county attorney of Norton county with having intoxicating liquor in his possession on the occasion when he was arrested by the city marshal. He appeals from the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court finding him guilty.
Two points only are urged by the appellant as errors committed by the trial court: First, the admitting in evidence of the jug of liquor, because it is claimed the evidence was not sufficiently connected or clear to enable the jury to identify the jug introduced as the same jug the marshal claimed to have found in the car when 'the arrest was made; second, that the evidence did not show such possession of the jug as the law requires when more than one person was in the car at the time the jug was found.
The defendant admits the jug was in the car when he was arrested, that it contained liquid, that he drank several times from it, and that he pleaded guilty to being intoxicated when arrested. The marshal says he took possession of it in the car and took it to the office of the police judge. Other witnesses saw the jug in the car. We have no doubt about a jug of liquor being in the car at the time of the arrest or the identity of the jug introduced in evidence. The appellant claims the evidence does not show possession of the jug by him at the time of the arrest as such possession is defined in the case of State v. Metz, 107 Kan. 593, 596, 193 Pac. 177, which definition was followed by the trial court in the instructions given, about which instructions no complaint is made; and, further, that the rule established in the case of State v. Munson, 111 Kan. 318, 206 Pac. 794, holding that the drinking of liquor given to one for the purpose of drinking all he wants and to return the remainder was not such possession as was contemplated in the bone-dry law- He further insists that he was a guest on the trip of another who invited him to go with him, who stopped on the road and procured the jug hidden behind a Russian thistle, and who later requested defendant to drive-the car. These facts alone, under the authorities above cited, would practically exonerate the defendant from having the kind of possession required, but there is other evidence on the subject which'is earnestly disputed by the defendant. The jury may have discred
The judgment is affirmed.