81 Ga. App. 756 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1950
According to the undisputed evidence, two police officers of Fulton County went on Sunday, February 20, 1949, to a little stand or place of business then operated by the defendant and informed him they wanted to purchase two pints of whisky. The officers wore civilian clothes. Realizing that the defendant did not know them, they told him they were going down on the river fishing and wanted to take a little “drinking liquor” down with them, and that they were friends of a man who operated a place of business across the street from that operated by the defendant. The defendant, according to the testimony of these witnesses, replied to the officers that since they were friends of a friend of his he would try to procure the whisky for them. He then went out the front door and presently ■ returned with two pints of whisky for which the officers paid the sum of $5 per pint in marked money. A short time thereafter the officers returned with other officers and made
Counsel for the defendant contend that in connection with the sale .of the liquor the defendant acted as agent for the purchasers and not as agent for the seller; also that the defendant cannot be convicted on proof showing only that by his consent whisky was illegally sold by another on his premises. In support of their contention they cite Black v. State, 112 Ga. 29 (2) (37 S. E. 108), Blankinship v. State, 112 Ga. 402 (2) (37 S. E. 732), and Evans v. State, 101 Ga. 780 (1, 3) (29 S. E. 40). Recognizing the principle of law laid down in these authorities, the jury in the instant case, however, was authorized to find from the evidence, construing the same in its light most favorable to support the verdict, that the defendant himself sold the whisky. The jury was not bound to accept the explanation made by the defendant and, construing the testimony of the two officers who made the purchase together with the testimony of the officers who made the search and found the trap containing 9 pints of whisky of the sáme variety on the premises of the defendant and within 3 feet of his building and in the same direction that the defendant himself went when he procured the whisky for the officers in the first instance, the findings that the defendant sold the whisky to the officers himself, and that the same was sold on Sunday, were authorized.
It appears that the accusation with the word “prisoner”
The judgment of the superior court overruling the certiorari is without error.
Judgment affirmed.