State v. Bubis

227 P. 384, 39 Idaho 376, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 31
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 227 P. 384 (State v. Bubis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Bubis, 227 P. 384, 39 Idaho 376, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 31 (Idaho 1924).

Opinion

McCARTHY, C. J.

This appeal is taken from a judgment of conviction of the crime of unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor. The principal assignments of error are, (1) the court erred in admitting evidence of a certain statement made by the sheriff to the appellant and the latter’s reply; (2) the court erred in sustaining respond *378 ent’s objection to certain questions asked the sheriff on cross-examination relating to the statement which he had made to the appellant; (3) the court erred in giving two instructions.

The sheriff was permitted to testify over objection that he stated to appellant, while making an examination of his residence, that he had been informed by a friend of appellant, who lived in that vicinity or near, that appellant was selling liquor there and that appellant said in response to this, “No. I no make it. I didn’t make it.” The contention is that the admission of this evidence is prejudicial error; first, because it tends to prove the commission of a collateral offense, and, secondly, because it is hearsay. Respondent defends the admission of the evidence on the ground that appellant’s answer to the statement made by the sheriff constitutes an implied admission, in that, when appellant said that he did not make it (referring to the liquor), he impliedly admitted that he had possession of it as charged in the information.

The objection, however, is not to the sheriff’s testimony as to what appellant said, but rather to the sheriff’s testimony as to what he said to appellant. It will be noted that the sheriff did not ask appellant a question, but rather made a statement to him which constituted a recital of facts; that the statement was calculated to give the jury the impression that appellant was selling liquor. It was a hearsay statement. If the defendant had admitted the truth of the statement this would remove all question. This, however, he did not do. His answer shows that he must have misunderstood the statement of the sheriff. Treating the statement of the sheriff as the objectionable matter, we will examine the grounds of objection to it. The first ground is that it tends to prove a collateral offense, viz., the sale of liquor. The words “that appellant was selling liquor there” necessarily imply in the house or on the premises. Granting that one may sell liquor, or at least participate in a sale, without having possession of it, that was not the state of facts suggested by the language. Selling *379 it “there” necessarily involved having possession of it. In other words, the facts involved in the statement, if proved, would tend to establish the crime charged, viz., possession. If the evidence were otherwise admissible, it would not be inadmissible as tending to prove a collateral offense.

The objection to the sheriff’s statement as hearsay was well taken. It is true that statements voluntarily made by a defendant, constituting an express or implied admission, are admissible in evidence. This does not mean, however, that officers can engage a defendant in conversation, make statements of fact to him based entirely on hearsay and thus make hearsay evidence admissible. In State v. Main, 37 Ida. 449, 216 Pac. 731, we held:

“It is error to permit a witness, by way of explaining contradictory statements, to give hearsay evidence of a prejudicial nature.”

In a similar way it is error to permit a witness to testify to hearsay statements which he made to a defendant during a conversation with him, unless the defendant, in replying to such statements, admitted they were true.

On cross-examination appellant’s counsel asked the sheriff to name the person or persons who had informed him that appellant was selling liquor, to which an objection by respondent was sustained. The lower court evidently took the position that the sheriff’s statement to appellant was admissible in order to lay a foundation for the answer which appellant made, but that the question who had given the sheriff the information raised a collateral issue. The admission of the statement was error. To have followed this up by permitting appellant to inquire as to the source of the sheriff’s information would not have cured the error and would have been pursuing a collateral issue. The principal question is whether the admission of the sheriff’s statement was so prejudicial as to be reversible.

It is well established that the admission of hearsay evidence is not reversible error if the facts sought to be proved be so clearly established by other competent evidence as to *380 negative any reasonable inference that the admission of the hearsay evidence had a .prejudicial effect. (17 C. J., p. 332, sec. 3675.) The evidence introduced by respondent shows that the officers, at the time they searched appellant’s residence, found a ten-gallon keg of raisin mash in the bathroom and found a trap-door in a toilet. ' There were two openings in the foundation of the house, and .tracks around one of them, both outside and inside. Going through one of these openings they found underneath the house four bottles of moonshine whisky, an empty ten-gallon keg, a bunch of corks and an empty jug, which had the odor of moonshine. The sheriff asked appellant how he got under the house and he said: “I go through hole back where you find the bottle.” One of the officers searching under the house said: “I found another bottle,” and appellant said, “Well, they found it. I guess they take me to jail.” When taken to jail appellant said he would plead guilty to possession but not to manufacture.

Testifying in his own behalf appellant said that the ten-gallon keg contained raisin compote for use in cooking. He denied any knowledge of the moonshine whisky which was found under the house. He denied telling the sheriff how he got under the house. He said that when he heard one of the officers say, “Here it is,” he replied, “Maybe find something. Maybe take me in jail.” He said that the officers told him, if he pleaded guilty to possession, that did not mean he put the liquor there or knew anything about it, and with that understanding he said he was guilty of possession. Respondent introduced evidence, in chief and in rebuttal, that such a statement was not made to him. A justice of the peace was called to the jail and committed defendant for trial in the district court on the charge of possession, on the theory that he had waived a preliminary examination. Later the district court, on appellant’s motion, quashed an information on the ground that appellant had not waived a preliminary. He was then given a preliminary examination. However, this did not render inadmissible the evidence of the officers that appellant said he *381 would plead guilty to possession but not to manufacture. Whether he waived the preliminary or not, this statement was admissible. Whether it was obtained by misrepresentation was, on the evidence, a question for the jury.

In view of all the facts shown by this record we conclude that the admission of the evidence of the statement made by the sheriff to appellant was not reversible error. In view of the other evidence there is no reason to believe that it was an inducing or even contributing cause of the verdict.

Appellant complains of language used in one instruction of the court as follows, to wit:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P. 384, 39 Idaho 376, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bubis-idaho-1924.