McAllister v. State

6 So. 2d 32, 30 Ala. App. 366, 1942 Ala. App. LEXIS 41
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1942
Docket6 Div. 779.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 6 So. 2d 32 (McAllister v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAllister v. State, 6 So. 2d 32, 30 Ala. App. 366, 1942 Ala. App. LEXIS 41 (Ala. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BRICKEN, Presiding Judge.

The indictment in this case was filed on the 24th day of August, 1939. It charged the defendant (appellant) with the offense of transporting spirituous, vinous or malt liquors in quantities of five gallons or more, contrary to law. Under the Statute, Section 1, Acts of Ala.1927, p. 704, Code 1940, Tit. 29, § 187, the offense charged was a felony.

At the time of the filing, in court, of said indictment, the record shows, and this court judicially knows, that the Honorable Henry B. Foster was Judge of the 6th Judicial Circuit. The record discloses also that said Judge presided over the court at the term thereof when this indictment was returned and filed in said court. The trial was had on April 8, 1941, and resulted in the conviction of the defendant. Judgment of conviction was pronounced and entered, from which this appeal was taken.

Upon the trial of this case, there was no dispute about the fact that Bolton, a deputy sheriff, and the only State witness upon the trial, found mdre than five gallons of whiskey in the trunk of an automobile being driven by the defendant. As to this, Bolton testified : “I know the defendant. On the 3rd day of July 1939, when I first saw him, he was coming up Greensboro Avenue (in Tuscaloosa). I. was going down Greensboro Avenue. I turned and followed him, and about half mile I pulled him over to one side and stopped him, and he said, T guess you want me for driving without a license tag,’ and I said, ‘No, Oscar, I want that fourth of July whiskey you have.’ He said: T have not got any,’ and I said, ‘What about the trunk, is it locked?’ He said, ‘No.’ I went and looked in it and found the whiskey in the trunk. Mr. McAllister made no objection at all to my searching the car when we stopped him on the road. He was driving a brand new Ford V 8 car that he had bought from Moundville Motor Co., and he told me he was trying it out and I think he had just bought it the night before at Moundville. The trunk was not locked. The car had 118 miles on it.”

The defendant, in explanation of the foregoing testimony, and as a defense to the charge, testified as follows:

“My name is Oscar F. McAllister. I am some times called Freeman McAllister. I was raised at Buhl Alabama. My mother lives there now. This is my wife here now. My wife is a teacher in the Tuscaloosa *368 County Schools. At the time I was arrested, we were living on the West Place at Taylorville. We had our place in University Place rented out. I was arrested on the third day of July and we were living at Taylorville at that time. I had been working at the University.

“On the night preceding the afternoon on which I was arrested, my wife and my baby and myself had gone to Moundville. I drove a car down there and traded it in. The papers had not been executed, not all of them. I left the car that I went in down there. It was a Plymouth. I traded this car in oil a Ford Sedan V8. It had a trunk on it. I made the trade with the Mound-ville Motor Co. I don’t remember the man’s name. I first decided to take a blue car and it was bent up a little and I said we might as well take a black one, and they droVe it around to the front. The blue one had some dents in it. I did not have anything to do with the preparation of the car for trading. I did not see what was inside the car, only what was in the car. I never raised the trunk lid. It was about dark when we got there and it was eight or nine o’clock when we made the trade. I had no occasion to look into the trunk and I did not look into it at all. I don’t remember how many cars was in the garage, but there were several sitting around it. There were not several people working in it at that time but there were several around it. I do not know how many cars were in there but I imagine about eight or ten. That is my best judgment. When they drove the car out for me to take charge of, my wife and little baby got into it. We drove up to town and stopped at the drug store and then went home. I think the car had been driven some fifty odd miles the best I remember, but I do not know who put those miles on it. We went back home from town and I imagine it was about eleven o’clock. I did not have the trunk lid up frqm the time I left there until I got home that night. When I got home I went to bed and stayed at home that night. Just my wife, the baby, and I was there. She was not teaching then as there was no- school. All of the next morning I was around the house and came to town the first thing that afternoon. I ate dinner at home right around twelve o’clock. Sometime about dinner time I had a discussion with my wife about looking for a house. We had been talking to Mr. Head or Mr. Atwood at Kaulton about a house. The house we were in was only rented temporarily. On the occasion I was arrested I had started to Kaul Lumber Co. My wife.had taught school at Kaulton and she wanted to move back to that neighborhood. I saw the officers when they came down the street; when I first saw them they were about thirteenth or sixteenth street going down Greensboro Avenue. I was not making any effort to get away from them as I did not have a right to. I turned off the road where you turn near the A. G. S. depot to go to Kaulton. I was almost in Kaulton in the edge of town when the officers overtook me. I was driving at an ordinary gate, at about twenty miles an hour. Mr. Bolton accosted me and I said T guess you are after me about these plates,’ and he said, ‘No, I want the load of liquor,’ and I said, T have no liquor,’ and he looked in the car and said ‘How about the trunk. Is it locked?’' and I said T don’t know’ and he looked in and there was the liquor or something in the cans. I did not know it. I did not make any objections to his searching the car. I did not have any information that there was whiskey in the car at the time he searched the car or any time before that. That was- in July and the case was set for trial, I believe, for September 20th, following that, in 1939.”

Mrs. McAllister, wife of defendant, testified as follows : “I am Freeman McAllister’s wife. I am now employed as a teacher . in the Tuscaloosa County Schools and have been so employed twenty years. In the summer of 1939, Defendant and myself were living at Taylorville on the Greensboro road. We were renting from Mr. West. My school was out at that time. I have a home of my own in University Place, and I lyad it rented out. We had just been living there a short time. We did not rent it for any definite length of time and the place was subject to be given up at any time that Mr. West wanted it. And when I rented it I told Mr. West I would not want it long as we were looking for a house. I went with my husband to Moundville on the afternoon before -he was arrested, the baby and I. I don’t remember what time we got there, but we had to turn on the' lights coming back. It was in the summer time. There were several automobiles there in that garage. We looked at a blue car that we decided on and when ‘we started to get in, one of the men who worked there discovered there was a little dented place on one of the fenders, and he did not want it to go out until it was fixed and there was a black one and we said why not take it. We did not look in the trunk of the black one. We looked at the upholstery. After we got in the blue car they suggested themselves that we take an *369 other car and we took a black car. They drove it out and we got in it and drove off after we had gotten our things transferred from the other car. I never did look in the one that we drove off.

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Bluebook (online)
6 So. 2d 32, 30 Ala. App. 366, 1942 Ala. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-v-state-alactapp-1942.