People v. Amort

212 P. 50, 60 Cal. App. 29, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 54
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 641.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 212 P. 50 (People v. Amort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Amort, 212 P. 50, 60 Cal. App. 29, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 54 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was convicted in the superior court of Glenn County under an indictment charging him with selling intoxicating liquor in no-license territory, in said county of Glenn, contrary to the provisions of the so-called Wyllie Local Option Law. (Stats. 1911, p.- 599.) The indictment charges the defendant, in five different counts, with selling intoxicating liquor to three different persons.

In the first count it is charged that the defendant, on November 11, 1921, sold intoxicating liquor to one Frank Mursa. In the second, third and fourth counts it is alleged that the defendant on the first, tenth and fourteenth days of November, respectively, sold intoxicating liquor to one Ladine and in the fifth count it is charged that he sold such liquor to one Frank Howard on the fifteenth day of November, 1921. In each of the counts it is alleged that the liquor so charged to have been sold by said defendant was “spirituous, intoxicating liquor containing more than one per cent in volume of alcohol.” He was convicted under the first, second, third and fifth counts of the indictment. A motion for a new trial by him was denied and thereupon *31 he was fined the sum of $600, being $150 on each of the four counts, with the alternative of imprisonment for one day for every $3 of said fine.

The defendant prosecutes this appeal from the judgment of conviction and the order denying him a new trial.

The objections to the result reached below are, generally stating them, that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict as to any of the counts upon which the defendant was convicted, and that the court committed prejudicial error in allowing, over the objections of defendant, certain alleged incompetent testimony. It is further objected that the district attorney, in his address to the jury in behalf of the people, used language not justified by the record and which, therefore, involved highly prejudicial misconduct. These points will be considered in the order in which they are thus stated.

The alleged sales of intoxicating liquor by the defendant took place on the ranch of the defendant’s father, near the town of Orland, in Glenn County. The first count of the indictment, in which it is charged that the defendant sold intoxicating liquor to the said Maggart or Mursa, will first be considered.

It appears that three employees of the so-called State Law Enforcement League, Dale W. Maggart, also known as Prank Mursa, J. E. Jerome and G. L. Budd, were operating in Glenn County and that they received information on the eleventh day of November, 1921, that the defendant was engaged in the illicit liquor traffic^ at the ranch above referred to; that on the night of said day, at about the hour of half past nine o’clock, they went in an automobile to the defendant’s home, and while Jerome and Budd remained in the automobile, Maggart went into the house of the defendant, through the rear entrance thereof, and said to him that one Clifton, who was formerly a barkeeper in the town of Or-land and who, at the time of this alleged sale, resided in said town and was a personal acquaintance of the defendant, had told him (Mursa, as we shall hereafter refer to Maggart) that he could procure intoxicating liquor from the defendant; and after some conversation the defendant sold to Mursa a bottle of liquor for which the latter paid the defendant three dollars. Mursa then left the defendant’s home, taking the bottle of liquor with him. Budd, Jerome *32 and Mursa each testified that he tasted the liquor and pronounced it intoxicating. Professor Talbot, professor of science and mechanics in the Willows High School, testified that he had studied and made experiments in chemistry and in pursuing the investigations incident to that line of learning had had occasion to make analyses of various kinds of liquors for the purpose of determining their alcoholic content; that, in his capacity as a chemist, he was called upon to make an analysis of the particular liquor in question and that upon such analysis he found that the alcoholic content of said liquor was thirty-one per cent by volume.

Section 21 of the Wyllie Local Option Law provides that the term “alcoholic liquors”, as used in said act “shall include spirituous, vinous and malt liquors, and any other liquor or mixture of liquors which contains one per cent by volume, or more, of alcohol, and which is not so mixed with other drugs as to prevent its use as a beverage.”

It is clear that as to the first count of the indictment the above testimony sufficiently supports the verdict. It is true that the defendant introduced testimony tending to show that he was not at home on the night of the 11th of November, 1921, when the enforcement officers claimed to have called there and Mursa claimed to have purchased the liquor in question from the defendant. But it was for the jury to determine the conflict thus created in the testimony and the verdict implies that the testimony presented by the defendant, in support of his alibi, was rejected and that presented by the people in support of the allegations of the first count of the indictment was accepted by the jury. The verdict is, therefore, conclusive upon this court.

The second and third counts of the indictment charge that the defendant on the first day of November, 1921, and the tenth day of November, 1921, sold intoxicating liquors to one Boy B. Ladine. The latter, testifying on behalf of the people, stated that on two different occasions in the month of November, 1921, he purchased intoxicating liquor from the defendant and paid him for the liquor obtained the sum of $1.50 on each occasion. Ladine testified that he drank the liquor so obtained and that it was intoxicating. On cross-examination he was made to admit that he was in more or less of a state of inebriety when he purchased the liquors from the defendant and from this circumstance the *33 jury were entitled to draw the inference that he was fully capable of determining, upon sampling the liquors obtained from the defendant on the two occasions referred to in the second and third counts of the indictment, whether they were of an intoxicating character. At any rate, we conclude that the testimony by Ladine was sufficient to show that the liquors he procured from the defendant were intoxicating and that, the jury having accepted said testimony as verity, the verdict, as to the second and third counts, is amply supported.

As to the fifth count, an examination of the record has convinced us that the defendant’s conviction thereunder cannot be sustained. As seen, it is charged in said count that the defendant, on the fifteenth day of November, 1921, sold intoxicating liquor to one Prank Howard. The testimony of said Howard constituted all the proof offered to support this count of the indictment. Howard testified that .some time in November, 1921, he made an arrangement with ,the defendant, whereby the latter was to leave a jug of ¡brandy for him (Howard) in the back-yard of the premises occupied by the witness. He further testified that, near the same time, he purchased a large quantity of liquor from a man by the name of Cupps and also had requested him to leave the liquor at some particular spot in the rear of his premises.

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Bluebook (online)
212 P. 50, 60 Cal. App. 29, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-amort-calctapp-1922.