People v. Bliss

182 P. 63, 41 Cal. App. 65, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 432
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1919
DocketCrim. No. 464.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 182 P. 63 (People v. Bliss) 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. Bliss, 182 P. 63, 41 Cal. App. 65, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 432 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HART, J.

An information was filed in the superior court of the county of Humboldt, charging that the defendant, on the fifth day of October, 1918, within no-license territory, “did willfully, knowingly and unlawfully, sell, furnish, distribute and give away alcoholic liquors, to wit: whisky . . . to, George Normile and Dan Rogers and other persons whose names are unknown.” Defendant was convicted of the crime charged in the information and was sentenced to pay a fine of six hundred dollars, or if the fine be not paid to be imprisoned in the county jail one day for each two dollars of said fine. The appeal is by the defendant from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Thfe defendant first contends that the evidence does not support the verdict.

It was stipulated at the trial that the town of Pepperwood, in Humboldt County, was in “no-license territory.”

The evidence shows that the defendant lived with his brother, Daniel Bliss, and his sister in a house on the road to Eureka about one mile from the store of one Zecca, in Pepperwood, and that defendant always kept intoxicating liquors at his home for his own use. On the fifth day of *67 October, 1918, his supply of whisky being exhausted, he gaye some money to his brother, Daniel, who was going to Eureka, with which to buy a gallon of whisky, and told him to leave it at the house; that he bought the whisky to be used at his home. Daniel Bliss bought a gallon demijohn of whisky at Eureka, put it in a suitcase belonging to defendant, and in the afternoon started home -on a stage. At the town of Boleta he got off the stage 'but left the suitcase on it. The driver of the stage, when he reached Zecca’s store at Pepper-wood, left the suitcase there, which was the customary place where he left parcels for people in that locality. Daniel Bliss took passage on another stage and arrived at Pepperwood between 9 and 10 o’clock that night.

Defendant reached his home at about 5 o ’clock in the evening and saw the stage go by his house, but it did not. stop. At about 8 o’clock he attended a dance, at a hall across the street from Zecca’s store, in Pepperwood, and his brother, Daniel, also went to the dance when he arrived in town. Defendant asked him if he had sent the whisky and Daniel said he had but did not know whether it had been left at the store or not. At about 11 o’clock on that night, defendant asked Zecca if there had been a suitcase left there for him by the stage driver. Zecca answered that there had and that if defendant wanted it he had better take it because he (Zecca) was going to close up for the night, and they went over to the store. The only light in the store was a flashlight which Zecca had. Defendant took the demijohn out of the suitcase and went out on the porch of the store. He there met Dan Rogers, whom he recognized by his voice, it being a dark night; there were others present whom he did not recognize ; later, he recognized Normile by his voice. He stopped to talk with Rogers, set his jug on the porch, and commenced rolling a cigarette.

Up to this point there is no conflict in the evidence, except that the arresting officer, Frank W. Anderson, testified that it was a moonlight night. As to this, the witness was evidently mistaken, for the weather observer at Eureka testified that the moon set that night at 5:34 P. M. Anderson testified that at 11 o ’clock at night,, on the 5th of Ocober, 1918, he saw four ■■ or five men, among them the defendant, upon the platform in front of Zecca’s store. He said: “When I first saw him he was in the act of getting that *68 demijohn from George Normile and I stepped up and grabbed the demijohn and asked him who that belonged to. He said, ‘It belongs to me.’ ” The witness said he took the demijohn from the hands of defendant, that he put a seal on it and gave it to the district attorney, and that afterward he sampled the contents and found that the demijohn contained whisky. He stated that before- he seized the demijohn he saw two men drink from it, one of whom he recognized as George Normile; that the other man smacked his lips and said it was “damned good stuff.”

William McKay, an employee of the district attorney of Humboldt County, who was with Anderson at and prior to the time of the arrest, corroborated the latter as to what occurred at the time he took possession of the demijohn.

Ambrose M. Zecca, the owner of the store referred to, testified that he had gone from the dance-hall to his store with other men ten or fifteen times that night; that he saw defendant, who said he wanted to go to the store and get his suitcase. He was asked what defendant’s condition as to sobriety was and he replied that he “was feeling pretty good.” Witness, with defendant and Normile and some strangers, among them Dan Rogers, went to the store. Defendant and Normile went in with him and defendant got a demijohn from the suitcase and took it outside with him. Witness said he had a drink from a jug, but would not say it was the one defendant had; that he was not present when Anderson came up.

Dan Rogers testified that he left the dance-hall with defendant to go to the store; that he knew they were going for a drink, although he would not say defendant asked him to go for that purpose; the defendant entered the store and came out with a demijohn; that the jug was passed around but he would not say that defendant passed it around; that he (witness) had a drink out of a jug but did not know who handed it to him nor whose jug it was. /

George Normile testified that at about 11 o’clock, while in the dance-hall, he said to defendant that he wanted to have a glass of beer or something, to which defendant replied, that he “did not have any beer, maybe we can find something .else”; that they,waited until Dan Rogers finished dancing and the three of them, with some strangers, went across to the store; • that defendant went into the store and brought *69 a demijohn out on to the porch; that witness was in the act of taking a drink out of the jug when Anderson’s party turned a flashlight on them and came up to the porch.

Edward Bady testified that at the dance-hall he smelled liquor upon the defendant; that he was one of the party that crossed the street to the store; that he did not have a drink out of the demijohn because it did not get around to him; that he saw the defendant pass the jug to someone.

The defendant testified that a man had treated him to whisky before the occurrence at Zecca’s store; that when he took the demijohn from the store to the porch he had no drink from the jug that he remembered of; that after he had finished making his cigarette he picked up the jug and at that time the officer flashed a light upon him and came up; that he had not offered the jug to anyone for the purpose of taking a drink; that he did not give his consent to anyone taking a drink out of it, and that he did not know the demijohn was making the rounds and that people were drinking from it. He denied having the conversation related by Normile to the effect that defendant told Normile he did not know where there was any beer but that he had something else.

[1] The foregoing synoptical statement of the evidence plainly enough shows that the verdict is sufficiently supported.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 63, 41 Cal. App. 65, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bliss-calctapp-1919.