Reynolds v. State

111 So. 285, 92 Fla. 1038
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 10, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 111 So. 285 (Reynolds v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. State, 111 So. 285, 92 Fla. 1038 (Fla. 1926).

Opinion

Strum, J.

The writ of error in this ease brings here for review a judgment of conviction upon a charge of unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor, the accused having been previously convicted of a violation of the laws against the unlawful manufacture, sale, possession and transportation of intoxicating liquor.

Judgment was pronounced against plaintiff in error, who will hereafter be called the defendant, as for a second offense, the penalty imposed being within that prescribed by Sec. 5486, Rev. Gen. Stats. 1920.

Defendant contends that the evidence of his possession of the liquor in question was insufficient to support the *1040 verdict. There was no evidence on behalf of the defendant. The undisputed evidence of the State shows that four deputy sheriffs were upon a public highway, in the City of Lakeland, on the lookout for an automobile in which, so the officers were informed, intoxicating liquor might be found. An automobile appeared, driven by the defendant, and in which were three other passengers, á man, a woman, and a small child. Suspecting this to be the car they sought, the officers drove up alongside it, displayed their badges to the defendant, to whom some of the officers were personally known, and called on the defendant to stop. The defendant, however, declined to stop, but on the contrary accelerated the speed of the ear and drove out on the main highway toward and into the country. The officers followed and repeatedly attempted to stop defendant’s car, their efforts to do so being’ plainly observed by the defendant, so the officers testified, but the defendant driver succeeded in frustrating the efforts of the officers to stop his ear. After being thus pursued for about eleven or twelve miles along the main road, the defendant turned off into a country lane, along which he drove for some distance. His car was then stopped and defendant’s male companion removed several containers or demijohns and some sacks from the defendant’s car and deposited them in some bushes growing inside of a fence along the lane. As the officers approached, the car driven by the defendant proceeded through the yard of a nearby dwelling and on into a swamp. The officers following the car saw the defendant driving .it in the manner mentioned, and saw the demijohns and sacks removed therefrom and placed in the bushes. The demijohns were recovered by the officers and, with the contents of those which were not broken, were introduced in evidence at the trial. Witnesses for the State testified that they contained intoxicating liquor.

*1041 In offenses of this character, “possession” is usually defined as having personal charge of or exercising the right of ownership, management or control over the liquor in question. Terry v. State, 275, S. W. Rep. 837; Newton v. State, 250 S. W. Rep. 1037; Barnes v. State, 277 S. W. Rep. 647; Sizemore v. Comm., 259 S. W. Rep. 337. To constitute possession, there need not necessarily be an actual manucaption of the liquor, nor is it necessary that it be otherwise actually upon the person of the accused. State v. Aplin, 221 Pac. Rep. 989. There must, however, be a conscious and substantial possession by the accused, as distinguished from a mere involuntary or superficial possession. Baender v. Barnett, Sheriff, 255 U. S. 224; 65 Law Ed. 597; Sizemore v. Comm., 264 S. W. Rep. 1053; Anderson v. State, 96 South. Rep. 163; Brazeale v. State, 97 South. Rep. 525; State v. Munson, 206 Pac. Rep. 749. That the accused was in conscious and substantial possession of liquor found upon premises or in a vehicle under his domination or control may be lawfully inferred from the surrounding circumstances, especially in the absence of contrary or exculpatory evidence. Simmons v. Comm., 275 S. W. Rep. 369; State v. Schuck, 201 N. W. Rep. 342. We regard the evidence for the State in this case as sufficient to establish, prima facie, possession by the defendant of the liquor in question, and there being no evidence of contradictory or vindicating circumstances, it folloAvs that the State’s evidence, undisputed, is sufficient to support that portion of the verdict relating to possession. See: Cotton v. Comm., 254 S. W. Rep. 1061; State v. Meyers, 129 S. E. Rep. 600; McMahon v. State, 97 N. W. Rep. 1035; Autrey v. State, 88 S. E. Rep. 715; Simmons v. Comm., 275 S. W. Rep. 369; Terry v. State, 275 S. W. Rep. 837; State v. Parent, 212 Pac. Rep. 1061; State v. Arrigoni, 205 *1042 Pac. Rep. 7; Broens v. U. S., 290 Fed. 809; 33 C. J. 744, 745.

There being sufficient evidence that intoxicating liquor was in possession of the defendant, the presumption is that such liquor was unlawfully acquired and possessed by the accused and the burden of showing the contrary is upon the defendant. Chap. 9267, Acts of 1923, Sec. 5468, Rev. Gen. Stat. 1920; Carroll v. Merritt, 109 South. Rep. 630.

Chap. 9266, Acts of 1923, being inoperative (Porter v. State, 108 South. Rep. 814), Section 5486 Rev. Gen. Stat., 1920, relating to first and subsequent offenses under the state prohibition laws, remains in force. Carroll v. Merritt, 109 South. Rep. 630. Under the provisions of the section last named, where the accused is charged with the unlawful possession of liquor, either as a first or second offense, specific proof by the State that such possession was “for sale” is not essential to a conviction. It is sufficient for the State, in either case, to prove possession only, whereupon the presumption arises that such possession was of a character or for a purpose denounced by the statute as unlawful, and the burden is upon the accused to prove his possession to be lawful. Chap. 9267, Acts of 1923, Sec. 5468, Rev. Gen. Stat. 1920. That the possession or transportation of liquor shall have been “for sale” was a- requirement created only by the now inoperative Chap. 9266, supra, in connection with certain second offenses therein defined. State ex rel. Lockmiller v. Mayo, 88 Fla. 96; 101 South Rep. 228.

Defendant further contends that because his former conviction was for manufacturing liquor, and the present charge is for possession, he is not within the purview of the statute as a second offender, especially since it is not shown that the latter possession was for purposes of sale. *1043 But as we have seen, under Chap. 9267, Acts of 1923, proof of possession raises the presumption that the liquor was unlawfully acquired. and possessed, and casts upon the accused the burden of proving the lawfulness of its acquisition and possession, which burden was not met by the defendant in this case. Sec. 5486, Rev. Gen. Stat., relating to second offenses, does not require that the former conviction shall have been for an offense identical in character with the second offense. That Section provides, first, the penalty for those who “shall violate any of the foregoing provisions of this Article * * #”, meaning Article 16, Div. 5, Part 1, Title 2, (Sections 5458, et seq.) Rev. Gen. Stats., 1920; (Chap. 7736, Acts of the Extra Session of 1918), and denominates such first offense a misdemeanor. One of the offenses denounced by that “Article” is the unlawful manufacture of alcoholic or intoxicating liquors or beverages, of which offense this defendant had been previously convicted upon a plea of guilty, as alleged in the present information.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 285, 92 Fla. 1038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-state-fla-1926.