City of Des Moines v. Rosenberg

51 N.W.2d 450, 243 Iowa 262, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 405
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 1952
Docket47923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 450 (City of Des Moines v. Rosenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Des Moines v. Rosenberg, 51 N.W.2d 450, 243 Iowa 262, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 405 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

WenNERStbum, J.-

An information was filed on October 22, 1950, in the Municipal Court of the City of Des Moines charging the defendant, Albert Rosenberg, with operating a disorderly place of business by reason of the illegal sale of intoxicating liquor at 216 Fourth Street in Des Moines and in violation of section 106.4 of the 1942 Municipal-Code of Des Moines. The defendant pleaded not guilty. Upon trial in that court the defendant was found guilty as charged and he was fined $100 and the costs taxed against him. Thereafter he appealed to the District Court of Poli County, Iowa. Sections 602.44, 762.43, 1950 Code.' In that court a jury was waived and upon trial the defendant was found guilty as charged and fined $100 and the costs taxed against him. The judgment provided that in default of the payment of the fine the defendant be committed to the Polk’ County jail as provide’d by statute, section 420.36, 1950 Code. The defendant thereafter appealed to this court.

The testimony presented upon the trial shows that on October 22, 1950, two officers of the Des Moines police force, not in uniform, entered the premises previously mentioned between 12:20 and 12:25 a.m. This place of business, known as Carol’s Snack Shop, faced the east on Fourth Street and had a restaurant in the front. Immediately behind the restaurant and to the west was a partition in which there was a door. This door had a glass panel a foot wide and ten inches high. This glass appeared to be a mirror from the restaurant side, but one could see through it from the other side. Back of this partition was a room in which there were tables, chairs, a juke box, a small stage with a piano on it and on one side a bar. This back room is approximately twenty feet wide and sixty feet in depth from east to west.' The testimony of the officers disclosed that they observed at that time thirty* to thirty-five persons in the room, that they did not see anyone served food there but that many of the people who were in this back room were drinking from glasses. It is further shown that at the time the officers entered the restaurant *265 they observed the appellant on the sidewalk immediately in front of this place of business, that when they entered he followed them in and that they later saw him in the back room walking toward the bar. When the officers were seated at a table a waitress came up to them and left four glasses on their table, two with water and two in which there was an amber-colored ■fluid. They observed similarly filled glasses on other tables and in front of other customers. They testified that they were familiar with the taste of whiskey and that the colored liquid was •an alcoholic beverage which they believed to be whiskey. One of the officers siphoned the amber liquid into a syringe and placed it and the glass in his pocket and substituted a glass he had brought with him. This glass and the liquid was introduced in evidence along with the stipulated testimony of a chemist to the effect that the sample examined by him contained an alcoholic content of 40.7 per cent by volume. Later on that same morning the officers purchased two more drinks and it was testified to bj*- one of them that this later purchased liquid was also an alcoholic beverage and in his judgment was whiskey. About 1 a.m. of the morning in question a buzzer was sounded and the two waitresses shouted, “Drink or dump.” At that time the appellant, Rosenberg, and one of the waitresses began clearing glasses from the tables in the west room, and about this same time two other officers entered the room and arrested about sixty-eight persons then in the west room, and later the appellant. The evidence further shows that during the time the two plainclothes officers were in this place of business the appellant was not observed to be seated at any of the tables but walked up and down the aisles between them and occasionally talked to the man in charge of the door and the waitresses serving the patrons. The appellant was later found in a small office in the northwest corner of the west room forty-five minutes after the raid commenced. At that time this room was locked and the doorkeeper obtained a key and opened it for the officers. The appellant was' in this room with the lights off.

It is the contention of the state that the appellant was shown to be connected with the operation of the premises by the following facts disclosed by the testimony: that on October 22, 1950, the appellant refused the police officers access to the cash register *266 without a court order; that in September of that same year he had shown certain officers around the west room and commented concerning certain of the fixtures and equipment there; that on a certain day in July 1950 the appellant questioned the right of a police officer to enter the west room through the door from the restaurant; that on that occasion the officer said he might have to get a warrant and go through the door. This officer testified that the appellant then responded, “We will see to that. After all, I have some rights. I'have a right to protect my property.” On another occasion an officer accused the appellant of being a bootlegger and at that time he replied that the State of Iowa sold whiskey and he had just as much right to do it as they. On another date 'when there was a conversation relative to the sale of whiskey by the State of Iowa the appellant is quoted as stating: “If that is the law that the State of Iowa can sell whiskey I can too.”

It is further shown that on occasions when a police officer entered the premises and endeavored to go into the back room he was unable to obtain entrance but that when the appellant knocked on the door both the appellant and the officer were admitted. It is further shown that on the several occasions when one of the police officers had previously visited the business establishment in question he usually found the appellant in or about the premises and these occasions would be during the daytime, early evenings and after midnight. The evidence presented also showed that the applications for meter service for the electrical and gas meters installed at 216 Fourth Street, Des Moines, Iowa, were in the name of the appellant and that bills for these services were mailed to Al. Bosenberg at the address previously mentioned. It is also shown that the application for telephone service at Carol’s Snack Shop was made by a person named Al. Bosen-berg. The meter service records in the office of the Des Moines Water Works show that an application for water service at this place was made by an individual identifying himself as Al. Bosenberg and that statements were sent to that name at the address where the water was furnished.

It was the contention of the appellant in the district court and now in this court that the city ordinance upon which he was charged in the municipal court was in conflict with the state law *267 pertaining to similar acts and was therefore invalid. It is claimed that section 106.4 of the Municipal Code of the City of Des Moines, the section under which appellant was originally charged, covers the same type of violations as those enumerated in section 123.60, 1950 Code of Iowa.

It is further contended that the evidence as presented was insufficient to sustain that the appellant was one of the operators of the premises known as Carol’s Snack Shop and that the evidence did not sustain the verdict of guilty as charged in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 450, 243 Iowa 262, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-des-moines-v-rosenberg-iowa-1952.