Proctor v. State

176 S.E. 96, 49 Ga. App. 497, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 446
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 17, 1934
Docket23775
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 176 S.E. 96 (Proctor v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proctor v. State, 176 S.E. 96, 49 Ga. App. 497, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 446 (Ga. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MacIntyre, J.

The first count of the indictment in this case charges that on July 11, 1933, in Walker county, Georgia, R. J. Proctor did “have, possess and control spirituous, alcoholic, malt and intoxicating liquor;” and the second count charges that on the same date and in the same county the defendant had in his possession, custody and control “malted and fermented liquor, which looked like beer, tasted like beer and smelled like beer, and had the general appearance of beer.” The jury returned a general [498]*498verdict of guilty, and the defendant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, he excepted.

It was agreed between counsel for the defendant and the State that “the beer that it is alleged was in possession of the defendant on said date does not contain more than 3 and 2/10 per centum of alcohol by weight,” and that “the laws of the State of Tennessee and the laws of the State of Florida do not make the sale and possession of such beer unlawful.”

Cecil Nelson, sworn for the State, testified in substance that he arrested the defendant between twelve and one o’clock in the daytime at Eock Springs, Walker county, Georgia, and found forty eases of beer (nine hundred and sixty bottles, witness thought) in the Chevrolet coach the defendant was driving; that a woman was in the car with the defendant; that the defendant told witness “he was going to Phenix City, Alabama,” and asked witness “not to say anything about where he was taking the beer;” that he said “it had to be billed to Florida before he could get it;” that “the beer he had is known as 3 point 2 beer, that is, it looks like and smells like it” and “tastes like it;” that the defendant had an Alabama tag on his car; that when witness caught the defendant “he was traveling south on the LaFayette-Chattanooga Highway; that the defendant was not trying to conceal the beer; that the defendant did not tell witness that “he was going through Phenix City, Alabama, but that he was carrying the beer to Florida;” that the defendant told witness that he had “a bill for some of the beer, and showed me a bill some time during the day,” and that “it was billed to somewhere in Florida;” that witness did not recall whether or not the bill was in the defendant’s name; that witness “thought he had a bill for some of the beer, and for some he did not have a bill;” that “he had three or four different brands of beer;” that the road over which the defendant was driving “leads from Chattanooga, Tennessee, on through Georgia, and into the State of Florida;” that witness thought this road was “a direct route from Tennessee, through Walker county . . and on into the State of Florida,” but that witness had never been in Florida; that the defendant was going south, and that witness stopped him between a quarter and a half mile south of Eock Springs “just beyond where the Alabama road turns off the pike;” that “there are different ways to go to Alabama by turning off;” that, three weeks before the defendant was [499]*499arrested, witness had seen him in West Rossville in a Chevrolet car with a woman against whom there was a charge; that on that occasion there was straw in the back of the car, but no beer, and that the defendant said he was “hauling feed from LaGrange, Georgia;” and that just before arresting the defendant on the second occasion, witness asked him “what kind of feed he was hauling,” and the defendant said he had some beer, and asked witness to let him go. J. E. Cameron, sworn for the State, testified that the beer exhibited to the witness Nelson was the same beer that Nelson turned over to him with the defendant, and that some of it was Schlitz and some of it “Fall City Dark.” J. C. Keown, sworn for the State, testified, in substance, that “the road that turns ofil the highway to which the witness Nelson referred, just south of Rock Springs, is called the Alabama road, but still is not a road to Alabama;” that this road runs parallel with the highway and comes back into it “right at the Chattooga and Walker county line;” that “to go from Rock Springs to Phenix, Alabama,” witness “would go the Dixie Highway, . . Route No. 1;” that “you could go through Phenix City, Alabama, of course, in going from Rock Springs to Florida, or from Tennessee to Florida,” but, “to be honest,” witness did not know “which would be the most direct route;” and that, as witness remembered, the defendant had bills for only twenty cases of beer and “had forty cases in his car.” Without objection, the State next put in evidence the beer referred to by the witnesses Nelson and Cameron.

The substance of the defendant’s statement to the jury is as follows : “I run a garage at Chipley, Georgia. . . This boy that I was hauling this beer for is a personal friend of mine who lives in Florida, and he come by one day and says: ‘How about hauling a little beer for me?’ And I says: ‘It is against the law to have beer in Georgia.’ And he says: ‘It isn’t against the law to haul it through.’ And I had read in the papers about it. So far as interstate commerce is concerned it wasn’t against the law to haul it through, . . some judge had said so. And he was to pay me a dollar a case to haul it, delivered in Florida. I was to put it across the Florida line, and he was to take it on. . . So far as me telling Mr. Nelson about taking it to Alabama, in that he is mistaken. . . He asked me how far I would go through Georgia, and I says I go through Phenix City, Alabama, on across the [500]*500river at Columbus, and on through Dothan, Alabama, and that is the direct route to Florida. . . You couldn’t take forty cases of beer and put it in a Chevrolet coach and hide it. Mr. Nelson stopped me and says: ‘What you got?’ And I says beer; and my wife was with me. . . So far as that being an Alabama car— that car had just been repossessed, and it was in my possession. I bought the beer in Chattanooga, Tennessee — bought twenty cases from . . Sid Jacobs, and here are the bills for it; and the Fall City five cases for which I had no bill came from the Fall City plant; but the other bills are right here.” Cecil Nelson, recalled by the State, further testified: “The defendant told me they had legalized beer in Phenix City, Alabama, and that he could double his money on it there.”

Under the facts and circumstances of this case, we are satisfied that the jury were warranted in concluding that the defendant was guilty, and we hold that the trial judge did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.

Complaint is made in the first special ground of the following charge: “I charge you that there is only one question for you to determine, under the evidence in this case, and that is as to whether or not the beer in question was being moved in interstate commerce from one State, which permitted the legal possession and sale of beer, into another State, which permitted the legal possession and sale of beer.” The assignment of error is that this charge “was unauthorized by the evidence, Was hurtful to movant,” and “erroneously restricted the question at issue,” in that it “did not correctly state all of the issues under the evidence, as the evidence showed movant was either going to the State of Alabama or the State of Florida from the State of Tennessee with the beer as alleged in the indictment in his possession.” This ground fails to show whether or not the possession and sale of beer was legal in the State of Alabama, and it does not appear in this connection that any request was made for a fuller or more detailed statement of the issue or issues.

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Related

Watson v. State
91 S.E.2d 832 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.E. 96, 49 Ga. App. 497, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-state-gactapp-1934.