The defendant was convicted of the crime of maintaining a nuisance, to wit, a place where alcoholic liquors are unlawfully kept for sale. The defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied. The appeal is from the order denying the motion for new trial, and also from the judgment of conviction.
[1] The first point made for reversal is that the court erred in its instructions on the subject of reasonable doubt, in that it did not give to the jury the instruction found in the case ofCommonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. (Mass.) 320 [52 Am. Dec. 711]. This contention is partly true, but it overlooks the fact that section
[2] The appellant next objects to the failure of the court to give an instruction proposed by him on the subject of remoteness of certain of the testimony. A reference to the instruction given by the court to the jury shows that the contention of error in this particular is untenable for the reason that the court clearly instructed the jury on that subject, and was under no obligations to repeat the instruction already given, even if the instructions proposed by the appellant were not otherwise objectionable, as being argumentative, and also an instruction trespassing upon the rights of the jury as being an instruction upon the weight of the evidence.
[3] It is next insisted that the testimony is insufficient to sustain a conviction, the basis being that most of the testimony relates to sales prior to the twenty-ninth day of January, 1931, and are more or less remote. Only in one instance does the defendant deny the sale, that being in relation *Page 390
to the alleged sale of a bottle of gin. The record shows that the defendant maintained a home at the place mentioned in the information; that other persons had been engaged in the unlawful manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors at that place, and that the defendant himself had previously been arrested for a liquor violation, the testimony as to the defendant's previous violation of the liquor laws having been introduced by himself. The testimony of the different witnesses relative to the sales of liquor by the defendant extended over a period of approximately nine months. Three different witnesses testified as to the purchase of liquor, at the place in question, one of the witnesses testifying that he purchased liquor there a number of times; that he first purchased liquor of some woman at the place in question, and later purchased liquor from the defendant. The testimony of the witness Pieper is sufficient, if accepted by the jury, to show that he had sold him a bottle of intoxicating liquor at the place mentioned in the information on or about January 29, 1931. Witnesses R.W. DeVaney and H.N. Hobart related to the purchase of intoxicating liquors from the defendant at times preceding the 29th of January, 1931. Other witnesses testified as to the surrounding circumstances relating to the place and the frequency of visitors thereto. That this testimony is admissible is sustained by the following cases: People v.Medalgi,
[4] Evidence as to prior sales of liquor is admissible to show the character of the place and the purpose of the defendant in maintaining the same. (See cases cited, also People v.Frankovich,
No effort is made to show that the liquor purchased by the respective witnesses was not fit for beverage purposes, and did not contain more than the lawful alcoholic content. The case appears to have been tried upon the theory that the liquor was of the character prescribed by the Volstead Act, and the only questions presented to the jury were as to actual sales and the maintenance of a place for conducting such business. Under such circumstances we *Page 391
think the testimony introduced is sufficient under the authority of People v. Rousseau,
[5] Again, it is not the number of sales, but the fact of keeping a place for the sale of intoxicating liquor that characterizes a place as a nuisance. (People v. Mehra,
[6] That the language used by the witnesses in describing the liquor purchased is sufficient to show its unlawful character is supported by the cases of People v. Silva,
A careful reading of the transcript fails to disclose any error upon which a reversal could be predicated. It therefore follows that the order and judgment of the trial court must be and they are hereby affirmed.
Preston, P.J., concurred.
