People v. Jones

206 N.W. 996, 233 Mich. 514, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 483
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1926
DocketDocket No. 143.
StatusPublished

This text of 206 N.W. 996 (People v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Jones, 206 N.W. 996, 233 Mich. 514, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 483 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Defendant was convicted in the circuit court of Muskegon county of 'having, on the evening of April 15,1925, unlawfully sold to one Edward White a pint of moonshine whisky. The prosecution introduced testimony showing that on the night of April 15, 1925, police officers found four boys in the streets of Muskegon Heights in an intoxicated condition and took them ’into custody. One of them was a colored boy named Edward White, who gave his age as 18 years. The names and ages of the three white boys with him were, Paul Simonson aged 17 years, Norman Jones, 16 years, and Elmer Gould, 15 years. Edward White was arrested for furnishing liquor to the other three boys, to which he pleaded guilty. Coincident to that proceeding, defendant Fred Jones was arrested for selling to Edward White the whisky which the latter furnished to the other boys. Jones’ arrest was followed by a preliminary examination, as a result of which he was held for 'trial in the circuit court, where he stood mute when arraigned, and a plea of not guilty was entered in his behalf by the court, and trial by a jury followed.

*516 Defendant Jones is a colored man living in the outskirts of Muskegon Heights with a white wife and child. The only significance of his family relations is in connection with his identification. He made total denial that he ever sold any liquor to any of these boys or had ever seen any of them to his knowledge, except Edward White, whom he said he had met a couple of times at church.

Upon the trial two policemen of Muskegon Heights and the four boys were called as witnesses for the prosecution. The story as told by the boys was in substance that late in the afternoon of that day they had casually forgathered at a restaurant and cigar store down town called “Molly’s Place,” where they spent some time in social intercourse, during which Ed. White incidentally suggested that they go out and “get some moonshine,” which proposal' met with unanimous approval, and, waiting until after nightfall, they fared forth in that quest under his guidance towards the easterly outskirts of the city, and paused near a house which White testified was defendant’s home. Two of the boys waited in the vicinity while Ed. White and Norman, Jones went up to the house, White leading the way, and, after certain preliminaries, they were admitted by the rear door, following which White bought from defendant a bottle of moonshine whisky for which he paid him $1.50. They then joined the others, when the four jointly and successfully proceeded to consume its contents, after which Elmer Gould threw the bottle into' some nearby woods. Their trip back was less surreptitious and more eventful than their journey out, resulting in their falling into the hands of the police in an intoxicated condition.

Jones’ defense was an alibi and total denial of all knowledge of any of the events which the boys related. He testified that he left home early that evening in his automobile for a ride of some 12 miles out in the *517 country, accompanied by his wife and child, and a man he called Slim who had helped him repair his car, that they went to the place of a fellow named Tony, where they stopped, for some time and did not get home until after 12 o’clock. His wife and Slim testified to like effect.

Of the events at Jones’ house that evening, Ed. White, who knew defendant Fred Jones, testified in part:

“Well, me and Norman Jones went into his house. We went to the front door first, knocked and he told us to come around back and! we went around to the back and he opened the door and we asked him if we could get a pint of moonshine. He said he didn’t have very much but he would divide with us what he did have. He said he was pretty sick and that he was just going to start, go away, and his wife went out of the house and then came back and he went in the bedroom and came out with a bottle full of moonshine. * * * No1, it was a jar. He poured it into- this thermos bottle, then he poured it into that there jar which Moore got. There was some left in the thermos bottle and I finished that and there was some in the glass and he drank that, then we put the cover on it and went outside. I bought it. It cost $1.50. I paid for it. Gave him one dollar and a fifty cent piece there in the house. A paper dollar. Then we went outside and we drank the whisky and throwed the bottle away.”

Norman Jones, who accompanied White, testified in substance to like events, and identified Jones and his white wife in the court 'room as the parties who furnished the moonshine which White bought that evening. He also testified that when they went there Jones said he was just going out in the car with his wife.

In relating the next morning what he remembered of their previous night’s adventures, Norman Jones told assistant chief of police Moore that he threw the “killed,” or empty whisky bottle into the woods up *518 there, and when taken out there by the officer to see If he could locate it he indicated where he had thrown it off into the brush and they found the bottle there. It was identified by the boys as the bottle they had “killed” the night before, or one which looked just like if. Officer Moore produced the bottle in court and identified it as the one they had found where Norman indicated. He was allowed against objection to testify that he smelled of it and the odor made manifest that it had recently contained moonshine. It was then admitted in evidence. The ruling upon his testimony as to its odor and its admission in evidence, because not sufficiently identified, are urged as reversible error. While, as applied to search warrants for dwellings, our legislature has seen fit to abolish odor from the five senses with which mankind 'is endowed as perceptive faculties for apprehension of objects or conditions either present or near, it has not yet otherwise prohibited the use of the sense of smell as well as taste in determining the nature and presence of intoxicating liquor, or proof of the fact so obtained by those qualified to testify to its recognized odor. The evidence upon both propositions was competent and its weight was for the jury.

In support of his claimed alibi, defendant’s counsel called as a witness a young man named Tony Jackovitz, son of the so-called “Tony” at whose house, 12 miles out in the country, defendant claimed to be at the time the boys testified they bought the moonshine whisky from him at Ms home in the city. Young Tony’s command of English was manifestly quite limited, but he at first testified with satisfactory clarity that defendant, his Wife and child and Slim were out at their house in the country on April 15th. Asked what time of the day it was he replied:

“Well, there about coming see our place 9 o’clock and later 10 o’clock, our place one hour.
*519 “Q. You think it was in the morning or evening?
“A. In the morning.”

Having committed himself as to the time those guests arrived and remained, he clung tenaciously to it, although defendant’s counsel was allowed to catechise him on the subject as fully as he desired. Part of that examination ran as follows:

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Related

People v. Payne
91 N.W. 739 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 996, 233 Mich. 514, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jones-mich-1926.