262 S.W. 759 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1924
Lead Opinion
Appellant was convicted in the District Court of Falls County of transporting intoxicating liquor, and his punishment fixed at one year in the penitentiary.
The indictment charges the commission of this offense to have occurred about the 3rd of March, 1923, and the proof corresponds with the allegation. The exceptions contained in the statute were not negatived in the indictment. It is insisted that for such failure the indictment is defective. We do not think so. By the amendment to the Dean Law effective in November, 1921, the exceptions were removed from what is called the enacting clause of the act and were put in a separate section. The unbroken line of decisions of this court since that time have held it not necessary to negative the exceptions to an indictment charging a violation of the liquor laws of this State. This fact is conceded, but the soundness of the proposition is now challenged again. Hewitt v. State,
We do not think there is any expression in the Burciago case, 88 Tex.Crim. Rep., or the Mayo case,
This case must be reversed for the error of the charge of the learned trial judge as to the burden of proof. We quote from the charge given to the jury:
"In this connection you are charged that if it be established by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that spirituous liquor capable of producing intoxication was transported, then the burden of proof would be upon the defendant to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that it was transported solely for medicinal use."
Appellant was on trial for transporting liquor. He claimed that he was transporting it for medicinal purposes only. In such case it was error to require him to show by a preponderance of the testimony that he was transporting it for said excepted purpose. Such an announcement in the charge of the court subverts the doctrine of reasonable doubt. When there is testimony upon the trial raising the *550 issue of the transportation, etc., of liquor for one of the excepted purposes, the jury should be told that unless they believed beyond a reasonable doubt that such transportation, etc., was not for the excepted purpose relied upon in the particular case, they should return a verdict of not guilty.
Attention is called to a requested charge apparently relied on as presenting this same proposition, but which we do not think presents it correctly. Said charge is as follows:
"In the event you have a reasonable doubt as to whether the liquor referred to in the evidence was being transported by defendant for his own medicinal purposes, it is your duty to give him the benefit of the doubt and find him not guilty."
To our minds a charge couched in this language states the opposite of what was apparently intended. The jury may have a reasonable doubt as to whether the liquor is being transported for medicinal purposes, but this would not authorize an acquittal. They may not only doubt that such was the purpose of the accused, but may doubt it so seriously as not to believe it at all, but this would furnish no ground for an instruction that in such case an acquittal should follow.
For the error of the charge on the burden of proof as above mentioned, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Addendum
Appellant has filed a motion for rehearing complaining of that part of our opinion in which we held that it was not necessary to negative the exceptions in an indictment. The motion presents substantially the same arguments and authorities that are set out in the motion for rehearing in case No. 8379, Sproules v. State, opinion this day handed down, and for the reasons therein set forth the motion will be overruled.
Overruled.