Denham v. Commonwealth

268 S.W. 545, 206 Ky. 746, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1040
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 545 (Denham v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denham v. Commonwealth, 268 S.W. 545, 206 Ky. 746, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1040 (Ky. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Settle

Reversing.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Allen circuit court based upon a verdict finding the appellant guilty of the offense of unlawfully having in Ms possession intoxicating liquor and fixing; Ms punishment at a fine of $¿00.00 and confinement of thirty' days in jail.

The prosecution was instituted under a warrant issued by the county judge, and the appellant’s trial before him without the intervention of a jury resulted in his conviction. The appellant took an appeal from the judgment.of that court to the circuit court, Ms trial in which court resulted in the conviction' complained of on the present appeal. .

In both the quarterly aiid'circuit courts the appellant at the beginning of his trial, in addition to the formal plea of not guilty, entered a plea in bar and motion [747]*747to dismiss the warrant, each based upon a claim of immunity from prosecution for the offense charged, because of truthful disclosures previously made by him on oath before the county judge, sitting as a court of inquiry, which disclosures admitted his illegal possession of the intoxicating liquors charged in the warrant- and gave the name of the person from whom he purchased it. The plea and motion were overruled on each of the trials, to which rulings the appellant duly excepted. Furthermore, on his trial by jury in the circuit court the appellant, at the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, moved the court for an instruction peremptorily directing his acquittal by the jury. But the motions were overruled and the instruction refused, and to these rulings the appellant also excepted.

Of the several grounds filed in support of the appellant’s motion for a new trial made in and overruled by the circuit court, those chiefly relied on by him for the reversal of the judgment manifesting his conviction are: (1) Its rejection of his plea of immunity from prosecution for the offense charged in the warrant; (2) its refusal of his request for an instruction directing his acquittal by verdict of the jury.

The only evidence introduced in chief for the Commonwealth was furnished by the witness Haskel Simmons, who testified, in substance, that upon meeting the appellant near the Scottsville railroad station in the afternoon preceding his arrest; the latter, who is a resident of Monroe county and well known to him, stopped the automobile in which he was riding, and leaving it approached and greeted him (witness), after which he (appellant) drew from his pocket a pint bottle partly filled with whiskey and invited him to take a drink therefrom. Simmons, in apparent acceptance of the invitation, took the bottle and partly raised it to his mouth, but upon observing the appellant turn his face from him he did not partake of the whiskey, and when the latter again faced him returned to him the bottle. The witness also testified that he knew from the appearance of the contents of the bottle and by smelling it that it contained whiskey, but that the appellant did not appear to be under the influence of an intoxicant.

It further appears from the testimony of this witness (Simmons) that' the county judge, who, by' some means not explainéd in the record, had obtained inf or[748]*748mation. of what occurred at the meeting between the witness and the appellant near the railroad station, about 7:30 of the night following began and held in his office a court of inquiry before which he .caused the witness Simmons to be brought by a deputy sheriff, where, after being placed under oath by the county judge, Simmons, in response to the questioning of that judicial officer, related all the facts occurring at his meeting with the appellant, including the offer to him by the latter of the drink of whiskey from the bottle .produced by him. Thereupon the county judge issued a warrant for the arrest of the appellant, and also a search warrant authorizing a search of his automobile for and the seizure of any intoxicating liquors that might be found therein.

It was shown by the evidence that the whiskey in the appellant’s automobile was thereafter seized and. taken' in custody by a deputy sheriff, acting under the search warrant, and also that the appellant was arrested by the same officer under the warrant authorizing his arrest, but whether these warrants were executed on the night they were issued, or on the following morning, was not made to appear from the evidence. It is shown by the bill of evidence, however, that appellant gave bail the following day to appear before the county judge for trial on the charge contained in the' warrant of arrest, and that upon the execution of the bail bond he was discharged from the county jail.

It further appears from the bill of evidence that the county judge adjourned his court of inquiry begun the night the warrants were issued to the following morning, and that before reconvening it in his office he visited the appellant in jail, and after there administering to the latter an oath requiring truthful answers to such questions as he might ask him and then asking of him a few questions concerning his possession of the whiskey leading to his arrest, the county judge returned to his office, where the appellant, by his order, was immediately brought before him in charge of a deputy sheriff for further interrogation. Upon the appellant’s arrival at the office of the county judge, the business of the latter’s court of inquiry was recommenced, and after the appellant was reminded by the county judge that he was still under oath, his further examination was resumed and completed; the interrogation being conducted by the county attorney and participated in by the county judge.

[749]*749The evidence then obtained from the appellant is' not in the record filed on this appeal, but according to the testimony given by him on his trial in the circuit court in support of his plea of immunity, which does appear in the record of the appeal, that given by him in the court of inquiry was of so wide a range as to cover every detail of his possession of the whiskey found in his automobile and contained in the bottle from which he gave or offered the witness, Simmons, a drink, and from the time of his obtention of the whiskey down to that of its seizure under the search warrant and his arrest. And it is conceded that in answer to the questions propounded to him in the court of inquiry the appellant not only frankly admitted his ownership and possession of all the whiskey involved in the pending investigation, but also his purchase of it and the name of the person near Scottsville from whom it was 'purchased.

The county judge, upon being introduced as a witness in rebuttal by the Commonwealth on the appellant’s trial in the circuit court, corroborated the latter’s testimony given in that court in regard to the disclosures of his purchase and possession of the whiskey made by him in the court of inquiry, but denied that he was then asked about his possession of the bottle of whiskey seen by the witness Simmons, and stated that he (appellant) was told by him not to speak of that. The testimony of the county judge fails, however, to definitely declare that the appellant did not in fact state that the whiskey in the bottle seen by Simmons was a part of that later taken by the deputy sheriff from his automobile.

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Related

Spratley v. Commonwealth
152 S.E. 362 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 545, 206 Ky. 746, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denham-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1925.