105 S.W.2d 537 | Ark. | 1937
Appellant was tried in the municipal court of the city of Little Rock, where a fine was imposed upon him for the offense of carrying a pistol as a weapon, in violation of an ordinance of that city. Upon his appeal *79 to the circuit court he was again found guilty and fined, and from that judgment is this appeal.
For the reversal of this judgment it is insisted (a) That the municipal ordinance, under which he was fined, was not introduced in evidence; (b) that the venue was not proved, and (c) that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the conviction.
Failure to prove the city ordinance was immaterial. Indeed, it is unimportant whether there was a city ordinance upon the subject of carrying concealed weapons, as there is a state law upon the subject. In the case of Sharp v. Booneville,
Upon the question of venue, the testimony was to the following effect. Several officers testified that they were members of the police department of the city of Little Rock, and arrested appellant in a raid of a gambling game called "craps" in a pressing shop on Thirteenth Street between Ringo and Cross streets, behind the curb market. Ten or eleven persons were arrested for gaming and carried to the police station in the patrol wagon. These officers identified themselves as members of the Little Rock police force, and their testimony sufficiently proves the venue by locating the place of the commission of the violation of the law in the city of Little Rock. Tyra v. State,
As to the sufficiency of the testimony but little need be said. When appellant was first searched in the house no pistols was found on his person, but when searched again by the officer who put appellant in the patrol wagon a pistol was found in appellant's shirt bosom. The pistol was a .38 special, Spanish make, and "was loaded *80 all around." No attempt was made to see whether the pistol would shoot. It was turned in at the police headquarters. It was pointed out by counsel for appellant that there was no testimony showing how long appellant had carried the pistol, nor to whom it belonged.
It is not essential, to constitute the offense of carrying concealed weapons, that it should be shown that the weapon had been carried for any length of time. Henderson v. State,
It was held, in the case of Carr v. State,
It was held, in the case of Hathcock v. State,
Judgment affirmed.