Jenkins v. State

62 S.E. 574, 4 Ga. App. 859, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 570
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 1908
Docket1273
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 574 (Jenkins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. State, 62 S.E. 574, 4 Ga. App. 859, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 570 (Ga. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Powell, J.

Jenkins, by his friends familiarly called Jinks, had' a little store in La Grange; and to the rear, partially cut off by a. partition wall, was a smaller room, in which no goods were usually-bought and sold, but in which he kept coca-cola and stored “plun- • der.” Eor some reason — he doesn’t explain why, but then some-officers are naturally suspicious of some folks — the chief of' the-police of the city suspected that Jinks was occasionally selling a little liquor. So on a certain Saturday afternoon the chief of police, sauntering leisurely in the neighborhood of the store, was. “given the wink” by some one who had been stationed to watch, and immediately thereafter, going into the store and into the-back room, found a man and two women standing in the presence-.[860]*860of a two-gallon jug and some whisky glasses. The jug was empty, but the mouth of it was still wet and smelled of the corn whisky which had just passed through it. The glasses, too, were moist, and in the bottom of one of them remained about a teaspoonful of corn whisky. Upon the interruption of the policeman the party explained that they were drinking eider. The suspicious gaze of the officer fell also upon a closed box, the contents of which were guarded with a lock; so he asked Jinks if he might see inside the box, to which Jinks replied that he might. When Jinks unlocked the box another small bottle of whisky was found therein. There was also in the store a trap-door, leading into a cellar. In the cellar was found a number of empty jugs. The officer had no warrant for the defendant’s arrest and no search warrant for his premises. The testimony of the defendant’s witnesses was to the effect, that he,' together with a party of friends, had ordered some whisky on joint account; that on the night before, it had arrived in the defendant’s absence, and they had divided it and had left the defendant’s share in his back room. The defendant himself explained the presence of the liquor in the box, by saying it was a little he was beeping for his wife. We may say, in passing, that the wives of this country must be hard drinkers if all the explanations of husbands as to their possession of liquors is to be taken as true. The defendant was put on trial for violating the prohibition act of 1907, by having and keeping liquor on hand at his place of business.

1. Counsel for the plaintiff in error contends that the having of the liquor in the back room, especially so far as it was kept in the lock-box, did not constitute a having or keeping on-hand of liquor at the defendant’s place of business. Indeed, to quote directly from his brief, he says: “The jury evidently proceeded upon the idea that to keep on hand at one’s place of business means simply to have at one’s place of business, or around one’s place of business, or near one’s place of business; which is not the law.” He further contends, that the law is not violated unless the keeping is a public keeping at a public place of business, and that to have it locked in a box is not so to keep it; that before the law is violated, the liquor must be accessible to the customers of the place of business. The definition of what is a place of business is a matter of law, for the determination of the court; the [861]*861finding as to whether any particular place falls within the definition is a matter of fact, for the determination of the jury, except in those eases where the facts necessary to constitute the particular place a place of business are conceded to exist. Tooke v. State, 4 Ga. App. 495 (61 S. E. 917); Roberts v. State, 4 Ga. App. 207 (60 S. E. 1082). The same is true of the word “at,” as employed in the phrase of the prohibition act, “keep on hand at their place of business.” “At” is not a word of precise and accurate meaning or of clean, clear-cut definition. It has a great relativity of meaning, shaping itself easily to varying contexts. The standard authorities say that it sometimes means “in” or “within,” and sometimes “in and near.” See Words & Phrases, vol. 1, pp. 595 et seq; vol. 8, p. 7585. The Supreme Court, in Minter v. State, 104 Ga. 753 (30 S. E. 992), said: “The word ‘at’ is somewhat indefinite; it may mean ‘in’ or ‘within,’ or it may mean ‘near.’ Its primary idea is nearness, and it is less definite than in or on. At the house may be in or near the house. Webst. Die. The word at is used ‘to denote near approach, nearness or proximity.’ Kichardson’s English Diet. It is a relative term, and its signification depends largely upon the subject-matter in relation to which it is used and the circumstances under which it becomes necessary to apply it to surrounding objects. 3 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 168, and cases cited in note 1.” We think that in the context before us it means more than “in” and less than'“in and near.” It includes all that “in” would include, and includes less than all that “in and near” would include. That which would be designated if the word “near” were used is not designated by the word “at,” unless it is associated in some relationship with that which would be thought of if the word “in” were used; but where between what is near and what is in there is an .association and a relationship to the principal notion in the mind of the user of the language, the things so associated and related are properly referred to by the use of the word “at.” The phrase “at their place of business,” as used in the prohibition statute, includes the immediate room or place in which the business is conducted; also all the near-by surroundings, so far as they are connected with that room or place in any of those associations or relationships which have reference to the principal notion which was in the legislative mind. One of the notions in the legislative mind was that to allow persons-[862]*862to keep liquors at their places of business would afford them the opportunity of using the liquors to induce trade — a thing already forbidden by law. Another notion, we infer, was that the maintenance of an apparently legitimate business might be used as a cloak to conceal the carying on of an unlawful traffic in liquors. Of course a place of business is also a quasi public place; and those considerations which led the legislature to forbid the having of liquors in other public places and which were referred to in Tooke’s case, supra, were likewise presumably in contemplation when the phrase in question was employed. So that to progress further toward a practical definition, we may say that the phrase “at their place of business,” as used in the prohibition statute, includes in its meaning the immediate room or place in which the business is conducted; also any near-by room or place owned or used by the proprietor in connection with the business, or in such a relationship to the actual place of business as to make the near-by room, apartment, etc., a convenient place which the proprietor would probably use for keeping such liquors therein as he might desire to furnish others to induce trade, or for keeping therein liquors intended for unlawful sale under cover of the business carried on in the main place. The reasonableness and the probability of the near-by room or place being used for either or both of the purposes indicated is to be judged (usually by the jury) from all the surrounding circumstances, and especially from the manner in which it is actually used, if that fact be shown.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 574, 4 Ga. App. 859, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-state-gactapp-1908.