Powers v. Commonwealth

30 S.E.2d 22, 182 Va. 669, 1944 Va. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 1, 1944
DocketRecord No. 2832
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 30 S.E.2d 22 (Powers v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers v. Commonwealth, 30 S.E.2d 22, 182 Va. 669, 1944 Va. LEXIS 219 (Va. 1944).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ashley Powers was tried and convicted on a warrant charging that he did “unlawfully have in his possession illegally acquired whiskeys in excess of one gallon, * * * .” A jury fixed his fine at $50, the minimum punishment therefor. He asks us to reverse the judgment entered thereon on the grounds that the court erred in the admission of evidence, in granting certain instructions, and in refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury, because it was not supported by the evidence and was contrary to the law and the evidence.

The evidence consists of the testimony of three officers of the Commonwealth and the whiskey seized by them. The defendant did not testify.

On September 18, 1943, L. T. Younce, an investigator for the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, H. L. Lane, [672]*672an employee in the division of enforcement of that board, and Jack Turner, a member of the State police force, searched the premises of a building located on a State highway in Dickenson county, Virginia. They found on the premises sixteen half-pint bottles and one quart bottle of whiskey bearing Kentucky stamps and two quart bottles of whiskey bearing tax stamps of the Virginia A. B. C. Board. U. S. Internal Revenue stamps were attached to each of the containers. The premises were located about ' eighteen miles from East Jenkins, Kentucky, where whiskey can be lawfully purchased.

There were present on the premises when the search was made Ashley Powers, the accused, and a woman named Effie Deel. Powers was arrested and the liquor seized.

The building had three rooms, a front room on the entire front, used as a confectionery store for. the sale of candy, cigarettes, soft drinks, etc., a back room used as a bedroom, and a kitchen in the rear. In the last room there was a stove,frigidaire, and other kitchen furniture and a dresser or folding bed. The sixteen half-pint bottles of whiskey, bearing unbroken Kentucky stamps, were found in the bedroom in a dresser drawer. The three quart bottles were found in the kitchen, in plain view, on top of the dresser or folding bed.

Over the defendant’s objection that it was hearsay and opinion evidence, Younce was allowed to testify that he “understood the defendant runs the place and everybody says he runs the place. I know he is there 'and operates the place. I have been there two or three times before and he was there; but I can’t say I ever saw him do anything around there.”

On cross-examination, he stated that he never saw the defendant waiting on the trade or doing anything during the ■time or two he had bought cigarettes there; that a woman was in the kitchen where the whiskey was found, sweeping and at work, when the search was made; and that he did not know whether the woman was defendant’s wife or was running the place.

[673]*673Turner said that he lived in sight of the place four or five months early in the year 1943, and that he often saw the defendant waiting on the trade and he seemed to be in charge. He had also observed the presence of Effie Deel on the premises during all of that time. He further stated that on the day before the search, at Pound, in Wise county, five miles from the Dickenson county line and nine miles from the premises searched, he looked in an automobile in which Ashley Powers and Effie Deel occupied the front seat, and found at their feet in the car twenty half-pints and two quarts of whiskey, bearing Kentucky stamps, and the same land of whiskey as the sixteen half-pints and the one quart, bearing Kentucky stamps, seized in the search of the building.

Over the objection of the accused that the evidence was irrelevant, immaterial, prejudicial, and not a subject for expert testimony, Lane was permitted to testify that the sixteen half-pint bottles and one quart bottle of whiskey found in the house did not bear the stamps required under the law of Virginia, and that it appeared to him that the other two quart bottles, bearing Virginia A. B. C. Board stamps, had been tampered with by being loosened or taken off and pasted back several times.

The prosecution was based on the provisions of Virginia Code, 1942 (Michie), section 4675 (50)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.E.2d 22, 182 Va. 669, 1944 Va. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-v-commonwealth-va-1944.