57 Ga. App. 641 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
Lead Opinion
The defendant was convicted of having, possessing, and controlling intoxicating liquor. Briefly stated, the testimony of the witnesses for the State shows that on September 38, 1936, officers Joshua E. Cawley and L. H. Wilkins, armed with a search warrant against Charlie Wren and his place of business, raided "the Charlie Wren place, . . a place that has been operated by Charlie Wren out on the Milledgeville road.” When the officers first arrived at the Charlie Wren place, which was in the nature of a tourist camp and a filling-station, they found A. E. Snuffer in charge of the place, and they read the warrant to him and told him they had a search warrant for the place. At the time the search was being made, Charlie Wren was not at the place, but Snuffer immediately picked up the telephone and called Charlie Wren, stating, "You had better come over here; the officers are raiding the place.” In response to this call the defendant in about ten minutes arrived at the place being raided and asked the officers, "What is all this ?” The officers told him that it was a ■ raid, and read the warrant to him. In the search which occurred before the arrival of the defendant, various brands of liquors and gins were found on the premises.
In his statement to the jury the defendant admitted that he owned the place where the liquors were found, that he built it about two and a half years before, and ran it until July, 1935, when he had to go to the hospital, and that he had leased the property to Snuffer. He stated that he did not know that Snuffer was handling liquor "until he called me. He told me he was being raided, and of course he called me, and I went around to see about it, as I was renting the place to him and was interested in my property.” He further stated that Snuffer "is up in Yirginia where some of his family is sick, and as I understand it he is in
1. While wholly circumstantial, the evidence was sufficient to authorize the jury to find that it excluded every reasonable hypothesis except that of guilt. The cases cited in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error are clearly distinguishable by their particular facts from the instant case.
2. There is no merit in the special grounds of the motion for new trial. The overruling of the motion was not error.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
With reference to ground 1, the plaintiff in error’s attorney quoted the direct testimony of the witness Cawley as being: “Mr. Snuffer called somewhere over the ’phone, I don’t know where, and Mr. Wren came down there while we were there.” Counsel claims that the witness Cawley did not testify at that time that Snuffer called Wren, and that this court overlooked and misconstrued the record when we stated that Snuffer called Wren at that time over the ’phone. Counsel inadvertently has misquoted the testimony of Cawley, for Cawley’s testimony was, “Mr. Snuffer
With reference to grounds 2 and 3 of the motion for rehearing, L. H. Wilkins, witness for the State, testified: “I was with Mr. Cawley on this raid on the 28th of September, 1936-. We went there with a search warrant, which I have in my hand against Charlie Wren. We went on the Milledgeyille Eoad just beyond the intersection of Fifteenth and Milledgeyille Eoad. There is a filling-station, tourist camp, lenown as Charlie Wren’s Tourist-Camp, and cabins. With this search warrant we found Mr. A. E. Snuffer in charge of the place. We read the warrant to him and told him we had a search warrant for the place. He told us to go ahead and we commenced searching and under the counter of the place we found about two or three cases of rye liquor, consisting of 10 pints of Wilkerson’s Family, 12 one-half pints of the same brand, 8 pints of Crab Orchard, 6 pints of the Old Quaker Gin, 6 pints of Corbett, 9 pints of Seagrams’s and 11 pints of Corbett, 3 quarts of Hiram Walker, 11 pints of Cream of Kentucky, 8 pints of gin, 6 pints of Mr. Boston, 6 one-half pints of Bottoms Up. There wasn’t a full case of any of it. This was supposed to be intoxicating liquor. Charlie Wren was not at the place. Mr. Snuffer picked up the telephone and called somewhere — I don’t know where — and said to some one, ‘You had better come over here, the officers are raiding the place.’ So I imagine ten or fifteen minutes after that Mr. Wren came in and asked me and Mr. Cawley and Mr. King, ‘What is all this?’ And we said, ‘It is a raid,’ and we taken the search warrant and read it. That happened in this State and county.” In the opinion, this court stated “that the defendant made no assertion that it was Snuffer’s liquor in the presence of Snuffer and while the search warrant against Wren was being read to Wren nor did the defendant deny the liquor was his when the officers found it in the search which ensued.” Plaintiff in error’s attorney contends that the first sentence aboye italicized was a misconstruction of the record in that the search warrant was not read to Wren. It is true that the wit
Rehearing denied.