Kennedy v. State

191 So. 193, 140 Fla. 124, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1066
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 26, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 191 So. 193 (Kennedy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. State, 191 So. 193, 140 Fla. 124, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1066 (Fla. 1939).

Opinion

Chapman, J. —

Plaintiff in error, Shep Kennedy, and Bessie Helton, were jointly informed against by the County Solicitor of Escambia County, Florida, for having in their possession, custody and control whisky without the immediate container thereof having affixed thereon Florida *126 excise stamps as required by law. Bessie Helton entered a plea of guilty and plaintiff in error a plea of not guilty. He was placed upon trial, convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of $500.00 and costs or serve ninety days in jail in lieu thereof and one year at hard labor in the State prison.

On writ of error to the judgment of conviction it is contended here that the evidence adduced was insufficient to establish venue. The evidence shows that the officers found a gallon and a half of whisky without stamps at 300 East Fisher Street, and the defendant was at the place when the whisky was found and a conversation was repeated as having ensued between plaintiff in error and one of the witness for the State. The plaintiff in error was requested .to go to the Federal Building at Pensacola and later arranged bond. It appears that the jury was justified, from the evidence, in finding that the crime or offense was committed in Escambia County, Florida. See Lowman v. State, 80 Fla. 18, 85 So. 166; Duncan v. State, 29 Fla. 439, 10 So. 815; McCune v. State, 42 Fla. 192, 27 So. 867; Leslie v. State, 35 Fla. 184, 17 So. 559; Smith v. State, 29 Fla. 408, 10 So. 894; Andrews v. State, 21 Fla. 598; Bryan v. State, 19 Fla. 864; Hopkins v. State, 52 Fla. 39, 42 So. 52; 16 C. J. 769.

It is next contended that reversible error occurred when the State of Florida, during the progress of the trial of the cause, ever the objection of counsel for defendant, adduced evidence to show that the plaintiff in error had committed an independent crime other than the one for which he was then being tried. The evidence called into question was given by the State’s witness Ernest Harper, and others, and it is, viz.:

“Direct examination by Mr. Caro:

“1 am Mr. Ernest Harper, deputy sheriff of Escambia *127 County. 1 have known Shep Kennedy several years, I don’t know exactly. I do know where he lived last December. He lived at Fisher and Hayne. I know he lived there because he was there all of the time. I would see him there mighty near every day. ' I would see him there at night time too. I have actually seen him in the house, plenty of times. I did see him twenty-five or thirty days before that. I saw him inside. I wouldn’t specify any time of day, most any time I would pass there. There isn’t hardly a day I don’t pass out through there. I did arrest Shep Kennedy from that same place.

“Q. Now, how long before that?

“Mr. Mellen: I object to the testimony of any other arrest.

“Mr. Caro: If the court pleases, I am only asking the question for the purpose of fixing the time.

“The court: Objection overruled.

“My recollection is I went up there somewhere about November of 1937, in November, 1937. I do not know about how many weeks or months it was before he was arrested on this case. My best recollection is that it was sometime in November of 1937. I think this arrest was December 11th, 1937. They were both in the house at the time I was there, Shep Kennedy and Bessie Helton.

“Q. What was there in the house with them at that time ?

“Mr. Mellen: Your Honor, I object. It is absolutely immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent. It is just bringing in another case.

“Mr. Caro: Well, it is permissible to show violations of a like nature.

“Mr. Mellen: Mr. Caro is just trying to prejudice the *128 defendant in the eyes of the jury. It has nothing to do with the case at all.

“The court: Objection overruled. .

“Mr. Mellen: Note an exception.

“Mr. Mitchell was with me on that occasion and Mr. Gandy, Jr., young Hampy. My recollection was we got somewhere around thirty-five or forty gallons of moonshine whisky. He was living there then.

“Mr. Mellen: I have no questions.( Witness excused.)”

H. C. Mitchell was called by the State and testified, viz.:

“I was at Shep Kennedy’s house at a time prior to the time I was at his house in this case with Mr. Anderson. I was there on an occasion sometime in November with Mr. Ernest Harper. Shep Kennedy was there. I did make a memorandum fixing the time — I can recognize that as a memorandum I made. (Hands witness memorandum.) Mr. Harper and I were there November 16th, 1937. At that time we found there thirty gallons of moonshine liquor.”

Cross examination of the defendant’s witness, Bessie Plelton, in part is, viz.:

“* * * I heard he stayed at his brother’s but I couldn’t swear that. He has been to my house at night time frequently. He has been to my house in the day time frequently. I do remember the time Mr. Harper and Mr. Mitchell came there and got thirty-five gallons of liquor.

“Q. Was he there then?

“Mr. Mellen: I object to that on the ground it is immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent.

“He was there then. He was fixing to take out a load *129 of wood and I asked him would he go tell my brother to come and get me a bond and he said ‘Yes’ and he said he went down there and my brother wasn’t home. He did not pay any part of my fine for the possession of that thirty-five gallons of liquor. They turned me a-loose down there and convicted me on the selling. When they fined me down here Shep Kennedy did not pay any part of that fine. I think my sister paid it. I don’t know who paid it.

“Q. Isn’t it true when they caught thirty-five gallons of liquor there—

“Mr. Mellen: Now, your Honor, Mr. Caro is trying another case. This has no relation whatsoever to this case.

“The court: Any violation of the law of a like nature prior to the time that this offense here is charged is admissible in evidence.

“A. It is not true that on that thirty-five gallons of whisky that I come down here and pled guilty to it to hold the bag for Shep Kennedy when I knew it was his whisky. It is not true that I pled guilty in this case to try and take the responsibility' off of his shoulders because I thought I was a woman and I would get out light. I told them at first when they took me up in the Government Building it was my liquor. Shep Kennedy did not know the liquor was there. I don’t know if he knew the bottles were there. He was not there every time I gave this liquor to my friends. He was there sometime, probably he drank out of it, I don’t remember. I don’t know, if he knew this thirty-five gallons of whisky was there. He was not there, he was out in front talking to Mr. Cunningham. He never has lived at my house. He come there all of the time but he never has lived there. He never has lived there. He has not slept there a single time during November and December of 1937 * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 So. 193, 140 Fla. 124, 1939 Fla. LEXIS 1066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-state-fla-1939.