State v. . Campbell

110 S.E. 86, 182 N.C. 911, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 364
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 21, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 110 S.E. 86 (State v. . Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Campbell, 110 S.E. 86, 182 N.C. 911, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 364 (N.C. 1921).

Opinion

HOKE and STACY, JJ., concur in result; ADAMS, J., did not sit in the case. The defendant was convicted of having in his possession spirituous liquors for the purpose of sale. He was arrested as he was walking *Page 977 on Church Street in Asheville by officers who had received information that he had liquor in his possession for sale. He was not searched by them, and he requested that they should not do so. They put him in an automobile, and took him to the sheriff's office, where the defendant voluntarily took out of his several pockets 5 pints of corn whiskey, which were later introduced in evidence on his trial. Officer McLean testified that he told the defendant that he had a search warrant for his person, thereupon the defendant said: "All right, but don't do it here." It appears that the search warrant was what officer Wells called an "alias John Doe warrant," which had been obtained that morning. The warrant was not used at all, except as above stated, and when carried to the sheriff's office the defendant voluntarily took the whiskey out of his pockets.

The defendant was found guilty by the jury, and the judge being satisfied from the testimony of the witnesses, (912) who were examined after the verdict, stated in the judgment: "The defendant has heretofore been convicted for illegal sale of spirituous liquor and fined, and it appearing from the testimony of these witnesses that the record of the defendant for the dealing in liquor is bad, it is adjudged that the defendant be confined in jail and assigned to work on the public roads of Buncombe County for the term of two years, not to wear felon's stripes." Appeal by defendant. C.S. 3379, provides: "It is unlawful for any person, firm, association, or corporation, by whatever name called, to have or keep in possession, for the purposes of sale, any spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors." There was ample evidence in this case submitted to the jury which justified the verdict that the defendant had liquor in his possession for the purpose of sale.

He had it in his possession concealed, and was going from the direction of his home when taken to the sheriff's office, he voluntarily produced 5 pints of whiskey from as many or more pockets, and he offered no evidence tending to rebut the inference that he had it for an illegal purpose, for he could not conceivably intend to drink it himself.

It is true that C.S. 3379, makes the possession of more than one gallon of spirituous liquors at any one time prima facie evidence of violation of that statute, but the court did not charge that there was *Page 978 such prima facie evidence, but the contrary. C.S. 3385, makes it unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation at any one time . . . to receive at a point within this State for his use, or for the use of any person, firm, or corporation, or for any other purposes, any spirituous or vineous liquors, or intoxicating bitters in a quantity greater than one quart, or any malt liquors in a quantity greater than 5 gallons; and C.S. 3384, makes it unlawful for any person to carry or to deliver in any manner or by any means whatever, for hire or otherwise, any spirituous or vineous liquors in a quantity greater than one quart. These two sections have been held valid in numerous decisions, which are cited thereunder in the Consolidated Statutes.

The defendant moved for a return of the property under the authority of Amos v. U.S., 41 Supreme Court Reporter 266, and that all evidence based on possession of the liquor be stricken out by virtue of the authority of that case, and the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. But it has been uniformly (913) held that the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution impose limitations only upon the Federal Government and not upon the states. 4 Michie Encyc., U.S. Supreme Court, 139, and cases there cited from Barron v. Baltimore, 7 Pet. 250, down toBarrington v. Missouri, 205 U.S. 486, and there are other cases since.

The same ruling has been often made by this Court. S. v. Patterson,134 N.C. 617, and cases there cited; S. v. Blake, 157 N.C. 611, and many other cases.

In Burdeau v. McDowell, 41 Supreme Court Reporter 574, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Eighth Amendment applies only to governmental action, and however illegal the seizure of private papers by a private person or corporation may be, they are admissible in evidence against the defendant. The defendant contends, however, that in a still more recent case, U.S. v.Yuginovichi, Advance Opinions, U.S. Supreme Court (65 L.Ed.) 679, it has been held that the existing penal statutes as to intoxicating liquors have been repealed by the Eighteenth Amendment. But an examination of that opinion shows that the holding is that the Eighteenth Amendment and the National Prohibition Act since "repeal all prior laws only to the extent of the penalties against the manufacture and sale of liquor under the revenue laws, since they are inconsistent with the amendment, which now makes the manufacture and sale of liquor illegal."

Besides, there was no illegal search, and S. v. Fowler, 172 N.C. 905, is directly in point, which held that articles illegally obtained from the prisoner are not required to be returned to the prisoner if *Page 979 evidential. The subject is fully discussed in that very able and clear opinion by Walker, J., to which we could add nothing.

It has always been held in this State, as stated in Best on Evidence 283, that though a person under duress confesses to have stolen goods and deposited them in a certain place, although the confession of the theft will be rejected, yet his statement where the goods were deposited will be received, if they are found there. S. v. Thompson, 161 N.C. 241. To the same purport is the reasoning and citations in S. v. Neville, 157 N.C. 591.

The defendant, however, seems to place his chief emphasis upon the allegation that the defendant was arrested without a legal warrant, and therefore that his subsequent voluntary act in making a disclosure voluntarily of the liquor he was carrying on his person was under duress, and that the liquor should have been returned to him, and that fact should have been struck out as evidence. He relies upon the above decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court, and contends that the provision in our Constitution, Art. I, sec. 15, prohibiting general search warrants being similar, that (914) our own precedents should be overruled.

Whatever has been the purport of the U.S. decisions, above quoted, in the enforcement of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, the construction placed by our own courts uniformly upon our own police regulations must govern us, and we have seen no reasoning which will justify us in overruling them.

In this case there was no search and seizure, and the arrest of the defendant was valid, C.S. 4548, and the evidence of the whiskey being found on his person is competent. In S. v. McNinch, 90 N.C. 699, Smith, C.J., says: "In making an arrest upon personal observation and without a warrant the officer will be excused, though no offense has been perpetrated, if the circumstances are such as to reasonably warrant the belief that it had been." S. v. McNinch, supra, was for assault and battery.

In a much later case, Brewer v. Wynne, 163 N.C. 322

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.E. 86, 182 N.C. 911, 1921 N.C. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-campbell-nc-1921.