Loftus v. District of Columbia
This text of 271 F. 127 (Loftus v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This case comes to this court upon a writ of error, duly allowed, from the police court of the District of Columbia. The plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, was charged by an information, filed December 20, 1918, in the first count, with having on December 19, 1918, sold certain alcoholic and other liquors prohibited by law. There was a second count charging him with keeping the same for sale, but at the trial, which took place June 15, 1920, on motion of the defendant, the District elected to stand on the first count. The facts necessary to be stated in view of the conclusion of this court may be summarized as follows:
On December 19, 1918, police officer Bean, in company with another policeman and one Simpson, met Charles Mackall, to whom Bean gave two $1 bills, keeping a record of their serial numbers. Bean then searched Mackall, and found no liquor upon him. Mackall then went out of the back door of the Washington Hotel, where the parties then [128]*128were, and the others taking a position in a doorway some half a block or more from the place of business of the defendant saw Mackall enter the same. In a few minutes he came out and handed to Simpson a half pint bottle, which bottle was identified then and at the trial by marks pla.ced on a paper pasted to the bottle. The bottle was then handed by Simpson to Bean; by Bean to the witness Burke, who deposited it at the police station, where it remained in a cell to which Burke had the key for some time, but after his subsequent transfer to another precinct he had no access to said cell. The men in charge of the station had a general supervision over the cell in question and the bottle, but no man was detailed especially for that purpose. When produced at the trial the seal of the bottle had been broken and the cork had been removed and replaced. The contents of the bottle had never been analyzed, nor authentically tasted, but the contents smelled of whisky.
Seasonable objection to the introduction of the bottle and contents as evidence before the jury was made, but the trial court admitted it in evidence to which ruling exception was taken. Much other testimony, not relating to this particular bottle, was introduced, some 18 instructions were asked by the defendant and refused, and after a charge by the court, which is in the record, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, upon which a'sentence involving fine and imprisonment was imposed.
This, in our judgment, was lacking, and by reason of the error of the trial court in allowing proof of the nature above indicated to go' to' the jury, the judgment below must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Mr. Justice HITZ, of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, sat with the court in the hearing and determination of this appeal, in the place of Mr. Justice ROBB.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
271 F. 127, 50 App. D.C. 285, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loftus-v-district-of-columbia-cadc-1921.