People v. Tomasovich

206 P. 119, 56 Cal. App. 520, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 529
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 587.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 206 P. 119 (People v. Tomasovich) 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. Tomasovich, 206 P. 119, 56 Cal. App. 520, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 529 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant, under an indictment returned by the grand jury of the county of Sutter, was tried for and convicted of the violation of certain provisions of an ordinance of the said county penalizing the “sale, manufacture, unlawful possession or transportation of intoxicating liquors” within the limits of said county. Said ordinance, which was introduced in evidence, and which was regularly passed by the board of supervisors of the county of Sutter on the eighth day of March, 1921, is in its provisions fashioned after the law passed by Congress to enforce the inhibition of the eighteenth amendment of the federal constitution against the sale, transportation, and unlawful possession of intoxicating liquors, and known as the “Volstead Act” (41 Stat. 305).

The appeal is from the judgment of conviction and tho order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The verdict is assailed on a number of different grounds, which may be stated as follows: 1. That there was error, prejudicial to the rights of the accused, in the order denying defendant’s challenge of Juror Noyes for cause; 2. That the court, of its own initiative, improperly interfered with and thus curtailed the cross-examination by the defendant’s counsel of one of the witnesses for the people; 3. That prejudicial error was committed by the admission of certain evidence; 4. That the court prejudiced the rights of the defendant by making a certain comment upon the testimony during the progress of the trial; 5. That the court erred, to the serious detriment of the rights of the accused, in giving and also in refusing to give certain instructions; 6. That the conviction of the defendant is against public policy and cannot, therefore, be upheld, inasmuch (so it is asserted) as the evidence discloses that the accused would not have committed the act constituting the foundation for his prosecution, conviction, and punishment but for the inducements originated by the public officers themselves and by them held out to him to commit said act; that, in other words, he was trapped into the commission of the *524 act by said officers; 7. That the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, in that it was thereby shown that, if any crime at all was committed by the defendant, it was committed within the limits of Butte and not within the limits of Sutter County; and, 8, and lastly, that the ordinance upon which the indictment is based is in conflict with a “general law” and is, consequently, invalid, in that the penalty therein prescribed for the violation of its provisions is in excess of or greater than that prescribed for the same act by the Volstead law.

The specific charge against the defendant is .that, on the ninth day of June, 1921, in the said county of Sutter, and outside the limits of any incorporated city or town therein, he sold intoxicating liquors, to wit, “whisky and liquor containing one-half of one per cent and more of alcohol by volume, which was then and there fit for beverage purposes,” etc.

From the evidence it appears that, a few months prior to the day on which the defendant was arrested upon the charge stated in the indictment, one M. A. Carpenter had been appointed a deputy sheriff and as such charged with the special duty of “rounding up bootleggers.” Carpenter had received information through various sources that the defendant, who resided in Butte County, “about two-tenths of a mile above the Sutter County line,” was engaged in bootlegging or in the illicit traffic of intoxicating liquors. After obtaining this information, Carpenter called at defendant’s house on several different occasions prior to the date of the arrest, and on one of said occasions—May 21, 1921—in the course of a conversation with the defendant the subject of intoxicating liquors arose and was discussed by and between them. Carpenter asked defendant if he had any wine, to which the former replied: “No, I haven’t got any and if I had I would not be afraid to sell it to you. . . . I could get you some jackass brandy.” The officer answered that he did not like such liquor, but preferred wine, and ventured the suggestion that he could buy wine at Napa at two dollars a gallon, to which suggestion defendant retorted: “You ought to get some and you can sell it for four dollars a gallon.” On another visit of Carpenter to the defendant’s home, Carpenter, having taken some wine with him, invited the defendant to take a drink of the *525 liquor and the latter accepted the invitation, taking two or three drinks. There is, however, no evidence that the wine so drunk by the defendant made him intoxicated or had any perceptible effect upon him. Early in the month of June, 1921, Carpenter, accompanied by another deputy sheriff of Sutter County, named Baker, and one A. A. Laskey, again visited the defendant at his home. These parties took with them three half gallon empty jugs, which they left with the defendant. At this time, it appears, Carpenter and his companions entered into an arrangement with the defendant whereby the latter was to deliver to them, on the ninth day of June, 1921, at a point near “Dago Corners,” in Sutter County, the three jugs filled with whisky. The price agreed upon for the liquor was thirty dollars or ten dollars per jug, and Carpenter gave to the defendant the sum of five dollars as in part payment for the whisky. On the day appointed for the delivery of the whisky (the day after the agreement for the purchase of the liquor was made), the defendant, accompanied by his wife and a young son, appeared in his automobile at “Gomez Station,” located on the N. E. Railway, in- Sutter County, and near .“Dago Corners” at about 8 o’clock in the morning. Carpenter, Laskey, and Baker, in accordance with a prearrangement with the defendant, were at “Gomez Station” at the hour named, having arrived there before the defendant made his appearance at that point. The defendant, upon reaching Gomez Station, saw the officers in an automobile at said station and at the same time the officers saw him, and one of the latter signaled the defendant to follow them. The officers then drove the machine in which they were riding from the highway on to a private road, a short distance from the station and stopped, the defendant following, and upon reaching the point at which the officers had stopped, saying that he had “the stuff” in a suitcase in his machine. Carpenter thereupon stepped to the defendant’s automobile and took therefrom the suitcase and handed it to Baker, who removed therefrom the jugs, which were filled with what the defendant then said was “corn whisky,” and placed them in their own machine, then returning the suitcase to the defendant. Thereupon the officers paid the defendant the sum of twenty-five dollars, being the balance due for the liquor according to the arrangement *526 made with the latter at his home the preceding day, Carpenter paying the defendant fifteen dollars and Laskey paying him, by check, ten dollars for the jng of whisky which he (Laskey) was, under the arrangement, to receive.

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Bluebook (online)
206 P. 119, 56 Cal. App. 520, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-tomasovich-calctapp-1922.