State v. Abbott

126 S.E. 589, 98 W. Va. 159, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 26
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1925
DocketNo. 5047.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 126 S.E. 589 (State v. Abbott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Abbott, 126 S.E. 589, 98 W. Va. 159, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 26 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

HatcheR, Judge:

Lafe Abbott was found guilty by a jury of having an interest in a moonshine still, at the September term, 1923, of the Circuit Court of Fayette County, and by it was sentenced to the penitentiary for a period of four years and fined $300.00.

■Summarized, the evidence of the State is as follows: The Sheriff of Fayette County, with a raiding party, found Vernon Abbott, a son of the defendant, and one Walter Smith, *160 who was in the employ of the defendant, operating a moonshine still at about 3 P. M. on December 21st, 1922, in an old house locally known as the Rollins house. During the raid, the officers were fired upon by two men who “came up out of a ravine on a ridge,” about two hundred fifty yards from the officers, one of whom was described as having on a red sweater, and the other as “a little chunky man.” John Abbott, a son of the defendant, had on a red sweater when arrested shortly after the raid. Something like an hour after the shooting was over, the defendant came in out of the woods. The Sheriff testified that while he would not state positively who the parties were who fired on them, the little chunky man was about the “size of Mr. Abbott here” (indicating defendant). A boy named Earl Simms testified that while he was working for the defendant in February of 1922, he had seen and helped the defendant make whiskey, in a house called the old Huddleston house, on the very same still and apparatus which was captured by the officers on this raid. Other evidence was offered by the State tending to prove the interest of defendant in the Rollins operation, and that he was acting as a lookout for the distillers at.the time of the raid.

The defendant vehemently denied having any knowledge of, or interest in, the still, and the evidence generally is very conflicting. There is sufficient evidence, however, to sustain the finding of the jury. The defendant asserts that he was prejudiced by several rulings of the trial court, as follows:

1. The indictment in this case charges that the defendant (and several others) did “unlawfully and feloniously own, operate, maintain, possess, and have an interest in,” etc., a moonshine still. The defendant contends that his demurrer thereto should have been sustained for the reason that the offenses set forth in the indictment are separate and distinct. In approving an indictment alleging that the defendant did “sell, give, offer, expose, keep and store for sale and gift, liquors,” this Court held in the case of State v. Miller, 89 W. Va. 85:

“Joinder of two or more offenses of the same gen *161 eral nature in an indictment is not good ground of demurrer. ’ ’

In that case, we held that selling, giving, offering, exposing keeping, 'and storing for sale, liquors, were offenses of the same general nature. In this case, we must necessarily hold that owning, operating, maintaining, possessing, and having an interest in a moonshine still are likewise offenses of the same general nature. The indictment is in the form prescribed by the statute. The indictment is good.

2. At the close of the State’s evidence, the Court overruled a motion of the defendant to require the State to elect on which date it would rely for a conviction in this case, i. e., the time of the raid of the Rollins house or the time the still was operated at the Huddleston house. The Prosecuting Attorney had announced that it was the intention of the State to ask for a conviction upon one ground only, to-wit: that the defendant had an interest in a moonshine still on the date mentioned in the indictment, which was “the-day of December, 1922.” The defendant then moved the Court to strike out all the evidence of witness Simms charging defendant with the operation of a still in the Huddleston house in February, 1922, which motion the Court also overruled. The reasoning of the trial court on these motions, as set forth in the record, was, on the hypothesis that the still found at the Rollins house was the same still operated at the Huddleston house, the jury should not be precluded from considering evidence of the interest of defendant in the still when operated at the Huddleston house, in connection with such other facts and circumstances as tended to show an interest by him in the operation at the Rollins house. We consider the logic of the trial court sound.

Ownership differs from mere operation, maintenance or possession of a still in this respect: operation, maintenance, or possession may be temporary, while ownership is continuous. An operation of a still by defendant having been proven •under such conditions as indicated an interest in the ownership thereof, then such interest in the still would be presumed to continue in the defendant until he, in some way, disposed of his interest therein. Interest in a still being a *162 continuous offense, there can be no doubt but what evidence of the operation at the Huddleston house was clearly admissible.

“Where the offense charged is a continuous one, evidence of other acts than that charged is admissible to explain or to corroborate the evidence showing the act charged.”

16 C. J. 592, Para. 1141.

“Upon the trial of an information charging a continuing offense, where there is evidence of acts constituting the offense committed within the period laid in the information, evidence of acts eomlmitted prior or subsequent to that period, and before the filing of the information, is admissible when it illustrates, explains, or corroborates evidence of acts shown to haA^e been committed within the period charged/’

Toll v. State, (Florida), 23 So. 942.

But counsel for defendant contend that there is not a scintilla of evidence of any interest of defendant in the Rollins operation. Does the record bear out this claim? The defendant admits being up on a ridge in the vicinity of the Rollins house at the time of the raid; he admits hearing “a lot of shots” down in “Rollins Fork of Falls Branch;” he admits questioning his companion, Will Bickford, as to what all the shooting was about; he admits starting down the ridge in the direction of the creek within a few moments after he heard the shots; he admits hearing two more shots then further up the creek than the others had been; he admits continuing down the ridge to a point where he could see the creek; he admits he then recognized two of his sons, John and Vernon, down on the creek; he admits his companion then told him that he heard Vernon ask Sheriff Conley for a drink of liquor. When defendant realized that his sons were in the vicinity of the Rollins house so shortly after the fusillade there, and that they were in the presence of the Sheriff of his county, had he been ignorant of what was transpiring down there, the natural solicitude of a father would have *163 impelled him to have gone at once where his sons were, to have learned if they were injured by, or in any way connected with, the shooting. He had already expressed curiosity as to the cause of the shooting.

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Related

State v. Biardo
138 S.E. 384 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.E. 589, 98 W. Va. 159, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-abbott-wva-1925.