Kelly v. City of Anniston

51 So. 415, 164 Ala. 631, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 So. 415 (Kelly v. City of Anniston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. City of Anniston, 51 So. 415, 164 Ala. 631, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 16 (Ala. 1910).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Appellant was convicted of sellingwhisky contrary to the ordinance of the city of Anniston. Witnesses for the prosecution testified that, while they were looking through cracks in a fence into an alley in the rear of a pool room in the city of Anniston, they saw defendant and one Elder emerge from the pool room and stand together in conversation. Their testimony went to show that during the time defendant passed a bottle to Elder, Elder handed a'dollar to defendant, and defendant returned a 25-cent piece to Elder. This occurred after night, so that the witnesses’ observation of the transaction was more or less obscured. Continuing, the witnesses deposed that, immediately upon the return of defendant and Elder into the pool room, witnesses, who were officers, went into the pool room and arrested them. Defendant and Elder were carried straightway to police headquarters, where they were searched in the presence of the prosecuting witnesses. Over the objection and exception of defendant, interposed to the statement of each fact as it was stated, these witnesses were permitted by the court to testify that when Elder was searched whisky was found on him; that two bottles of whisky, both full and alike, were found upon the person of the defendant; that the two bottles contained whisky. We think that nothing more than the statement of the facts which we have made is needful to demonstrate the relevancy and materiality of the testimony, and the propriety of the several rulings made by the trial court.

There was no error in that other ruling of the court, to which exception was reserved, by which defendant was denied the right to have an answer to his question [633]*633to the witness McClellan: “Did Elder tell yon where he was going when he left the house?” That- was two or three hours before the transaction deposed to by the witnesses for the prosecution, and was in no sense a part of the transaction. What Elder said could have been indicative of his purpose only. He, in common with the defendant and all the other witnesses, testified that he was present at the time and place in question. We are unable to discern how Elder’s statement, made two or three hours previously, that he was going elsewhere, as we will assume, could shed light upon the inquiry whether Kelly had sold him whisky.

As for the other contention, that the great weight of the evidence favored the innocence of the defendant, it must be said that there Avas ample evidence upon which to found the judgment of guilt, its credibility Avas for the trial court, and we cannot interfere with the result.

Affirmed.

Doavdbuu, C. J., and Anderson and Evans, JJ., concur.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 415, 164 Ala. 631, 1910 Ala. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-city-of-anniston-ala-1910.