Bare v. Commonwealth

94 S.E. 168, 122 Va. 783, 1917 Va. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 168 (Bare v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bare v. Commonwealth, 94 S.E. 168, 122 Va. 783, 1917 Va. LEXIS 94 (Va. 1917).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner was convicted under an indictment charging him with unlawfully dispensing and giving away cider containing more than one per cent, of alcohol by volume, in violation of the prohibition act (the Mapp law, Acts 1916, p. 216), and sentenced to pay a fine of fifty dollars and be imprisoned in the county jail for one month and afterwards until the fine and costs are paid.

The pertinent facts are, that the accused manufactured [786]*786cider “from fruit of his own raising” and stored the same in an outhouse seventy-five or eighty feet from his dwelling, between which and his dwelling were other small structures—as one of the witnesses says, “probably a pig pen and smokehouse”—and beyond which his barn and a small chicken house were located. This outhouse was about ten by twelve feet in size, was built for a grain house and used for the storage of the cider, for molasses intended for the family use, and other food such as apples, beans, etc., had sometimes been kept there. In this house were one barrel of such cider, and one-half barrel of it intended for vinegar, in which yeast had been put by the wife of the accused in order to hasten its fermentation. A number of visitors had been given cider taken from these receptacles, and in this outhouse, though theré is no evidence of any concealment, disorder or intoxication.

Before discussing the main point at issue, it is proper to refer to certain other assignments of error.

1. It is objected that the court failed to give certain instructions, marked severally, A, E, and F. It is sufficient to say of these instructions that, while they fairly and properly state propositions of law upon which the accused had a right to rely, they are fully covered by instructions • 1, 2 and 8' which were given by the court at the instance of the Commonwealth. These instructions which were given, fairly told the jury that the prisoner could not be convicted unless the cider contained more than one per cent, of alcohol by volume, nor unless his guilt was proved beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the accused had the right to manufacture cider of any strength from fruit of his own raising for domestic consumption at his home; and this, in substance is .all that was in the instructions which were refused, though the rejected instructions expressed these statements of law with greater emphasis. They were doubtless refused by the trial court for the very good reason [787]*787that it is objectionable to multiply instructions which repeat the same propositions of law in different terms. All of these instructions might have been given, but it was not error to select between the two sets of instructions^ equally unobjectionable and to refuse to multiply instructions substantially the same in legal effect.

2. There is another exception based upon the fact that the prisoner was not arraigned and no plea was entered by him.

. We have a statute in Virginia (section 4012 of the Code), which reads as follows: “In prosecutions for misdemeanors, in cases not embraced by section 4010, after a summons has been executed ten days before the first day of the term of court, or if the accused was admitted to bail and made default, the court may either award a capias or proceed to trial, in the same manner as if the accused had appeared and pleaded not guilty.”

Certainly, if the accused is absent, no arraignment can be made because of his absence, but nevertheless the court may proceed to trial just as if he had appeared and pleaded not guilty. If he is present when his case is called, he should plead, if he desires to make defense, and if he goes to trial without pleading, he thereby waives his right to do so. While arraignment is necessary in felony cases, it is not necessary in misdemeanors. In McKeever v. Commonwealth, 98 Va. 864, 36 S. E. 995, in which the accused was charged with a misdemeanor, he did not plead, and this was regarded as immaterial by this court. The defendant should plead when he has the opportunity to do so, but if he does not, he cannot thereafter take advantage of such irregularity.

3. Another assignment of error grows out of the following state of facts: The Commonwealth, proceeding under section 30% of the act, had secured from the Commissioner of Agriculture a certificate showing the alcoholic contents [788]*788of the two samples of cider which had been taken from the accused. That paper reads thus:

“Department op Agriculture and Immigration “G. W. Koiner, Commissioner.
“Richmond, Va., December 5th, 1916.
“Analysis No. 8260-8261. Office No. 4334.
“Mr. Frank L. Dovel, Chief of Police,
“Harrisonburg, Va.
“Dear Sir:
“Below you will find the analysis of the sample as numbered above. Which is labelled 2 bottles of cider for analysis.
“Very respectfully,
. “G. W. Koiner,
“Commissioner. “Division op Chemistry.
“J. B. Weems, State Chemist:
“Mr. G. W. Koiner, Commissioner,
“Dear Sir:
“The following is the analysis of the sample numbered as above, received from you:
“8260 No. 1 Alcohol by volume 5.51 per cent.
“8261 No. 2 Alcohol by volume 2.89 per cent.
“Very respectfully,
“C. M. Bradbury,
“Chemist.”

This certificate was obtained under section 80% of the prohibition act, which makes it the duty of the State Commissioner of Agriculture, upon the written request of the proper official, to cause an analysis to be made of any mix[789]*789ture supposed to contain ardent spirits, and to return to the officer making such request the certificate of the chemist making the analysis.

The accused moved the court to instruct the jury to disregard that part of the paper which appeared above the signature of G. W. Koiner, commissioner, which the court refused to do. The variance between the date of the letter of transmittal from the Commissioner of Agriculture, December 5, 1916, and the date of the affidavit of the chemist, the 15th day of December, 1916, should have been explained, nevertheless the court correctly refused the instruction asked for by the accused. The statute not only makes it the duty of the Commissioner of Agriculture to cause the mixture to be analyzed, but also requires him to return to the officer making the request the certificate of the chemist showing such analysis, so that the letter of the commissioner transmitting the chemist’s certificate identifies it. The two papers combined tend to indicate compliance with the statute. While it is true that only the certificate of the chemist is made evidence by the statute, such certificate is not evidence unless the Commissioner of Agriculture, in accordance with the statute, has caused the analysis to be made, nor unless he also returns the chemist’s certificate to the officer who has in writing requested such analysis.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 168, 122 Va. 783, 1917 Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bare-v-commonwealth-va-1917.