252 S.W. 530 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1923
The offense is transporting intoxicating liquor; punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for one year.
Appellant and a lady were seen by the State's witnesses traveling in an automobile, going north and crossing the Red River into Oklahoma. They were later seen coming from Oklahoma into Texas. The car was stopped and searched, and in it were found twelve gallons of corn whisky, also a pistol. The explanation made by the appellant and his witnesses was that packages containing whisky were put into the car by another person without their knowledge of its contents, and that appellant had received two dollars for taking a man and the packages to Pottsboro; that on the approach of the officers this man fled. The wife of the appellant, in his behalf, testified in detail to these defensive matters.
The bill sets out in question and answer form the cross-examination of the wife. We have failed to observe anything contained in it other than that which is germane to the direct examination. No objection was made to the cross-examination, but relying upon the case of Brock v. State,
On the motion for new trial a witness was produced who testified that he saw a man enter appellant's car and put some packages or boxes in it. We are not prepared to say that the trial judge abused the discretion which the law vests in him touching newly discovered evidence in overruling the motion for new trial.
The punishment is fixed at a minimum, and in deciding that the new evidence would not probably have produced a different result, so far as the guilt or innocence is concerned, the conclusion of the trial court is apparently not unsound. Appellant was engaged in operating a service car for hire. According to his theory, he contracted with a man whom he and his wife described, to transport certain packages which the man delivered upon the bank of the river. The packages found upon the arrest of appellant and in his automobile contained twelve gallons of whisky. Whether the whisky belonged to him or to another was unimportant. The offense was transporting it, that is, hauling it in his automobile from one locality to another. We find nothing in the alleged newly discovered evidence to indicate that appellant was ignorant of the contents of the packages. The nature of the transaction is such that in our judgment the trial court was right in concluding that the new evidence would not have produced a different result.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed. *599