State v. Fish

143 A. 604, 49 R.I. 397, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 A. 604 (State v. Fish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fish, 143 A. 604, 49 R.I. 397, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 75 (R.I. 1928).

Opinions

*398 Barrows, J.

After conviction on a criminal complaint for a second violation of the Sherwood Act, so-called, General Laws, 1923, Chap. 127, defendant came to this court with 168 exceptions. Many of them now are not *399 pressed. Those that are insisted upon may be grouped into errors alleged to have been made in (1) the admission or exclusion of evidence; (2) the attitude of the court toward defendant and his counsel; (3) the charge to the jury, and (4) the denial of defendant’s motion for a new trial.

Defendant and his wife owned a parcel of land 40 x 149 feet at 1848 Westminster street in Providence. On the front portion of the lot was a building,' the lower floor of which was occupied by two stores, one being a furniture store operated by defendant. The second floor of- the building was unoccupied. A 2-room cottage and a barn were on the rear, of the lot. They were reached by a driveway alongside the store. The cellar of the cottage consisted of two rooms between which there was no connection. One of them was reached from inside the cottage; the other, a storage place, was accessible only through an outside bulkhead which was padlocked. This entrance was a few feet from the back door of the store. The key was in possession of defendant. One Therien, a tenant of defendant, occupied the cottage.

On July 18, 1927, the Deputy Chief of Police of Providence procured search warrants for the storage cellar in the •cottage and the second floor of the store building.

On July 23, officers went to the premises to serve both warrants, observed defendant leave the back door of the furniture store carrying one or more bottles, enter the bulkhead door by use of a key, bring from the cellar two bottles filled with liquid, and return with them to the store. He came out and again went to the cellar. A search of the cellar then disclosed the presence of a large quantity of liquor having an alcoholic content exceeding that permitted by the Sherwood Act. One of the officers says defendant said the liquor “all belongs to me.” Defendant at the trial denied all knowledge that any liquor was there. Search of the building in which the store was located disclosed no intoxicating liquors and return to this effect was made upon the warrant for the search of that building. As required by *400 law, defendant was given a receipt for the liquors seized under the first warrant. The property described in the receipt was identical with the list on the return.

Both search warrants were returned to court on July 29. On that date a claim for the liquor was filed by defendant’s present attorney on behalf of Therien as owner but the claim was not pressed and the liquors later were declared forfeited.

Taking up the alleged errors in the admission of evidence, the first is that the State was allowed to introduce the search warrant covering the building in which no intoxicating liquor was found. Defendant claims that a search warrant even when liquors are found is inadmissible and that this warrant was for premises entirely disconnected with those where the liquor was seized. He bases his contention on State v. Collins, 28 R. I. 439, in which the statement appears that a search warrant “would not have been even admissible in evidence against the defendant.” In that case liquor had been seized under a search warrant and the language quoted must be read in connection with the question which the court was discussing. It was answering defendant’s contention that a search warrant and return was the best evidence to prove what was found rather than the testimony of the searching officer. The court ruled against defendant’s contention, using the language above 'quoted. The case is not an authority that a search warrant is inadmissible for any purpose. The State may properly show by the warrant the right of á raiding officer to be upon the premises and make the seizure. Defendant made no objection in the present case to the introduction of the search warrant covering the cottage cellar where liquor was found. The. second warrant with its return showing no liquors found (to which objection was made) was not for a search of unrelated premises. Entrances to the two buildings were in close proximity. The search of the building on the front of the lot was a part of a single procedure against two buildings believed to be in use connectedly to violate the Sherwood Act. Both warrants were in the officers’ posses *401 sion when they went to the premises at 1848 Westminster street. It was neither error nor prejudicial to admit the warrant.

The next error asserted is that the court should have sustained defendant’s exception to, and granted his motion to strike out the testimony of a police officer, that one of the seized bottles in evidence, Exhibit 12, contained “home brew beer”; that the two bottles defendant brought from the cellar were “full of beer” and that the officer saw two men in the furniture store “drinking beer,” “real beer,” one from a glass, the other from a bottle similar to the bottles defendant brought from the cellar. Defendant’s objection was based on the claim that the officer could not have known with the required certainty to warrant testifying as above what the liquid was which was in the exhibit or being consumed. The seized liquor by chemical analysis prior to and at the trial indisputably was shown to be of illegal alcoholic content. The nature of the liquid being consumed in the store was of small value on the issue being tried, viz., whether defendant was the possessor of the seized liquor in the celler. Men were drinking in defendant’s store, from a bottle similar to those seized. This evidence was proper, to show the setbipg at the time of the search. What they were drinking was not of great importance nor strongly probative of the only vital issue in the case. Nor does it follow that the officer had no basis for characterizing as beer that which the two men were drinking. He did not pretend to testify concerning its alcoholic content. He characterized it as beer, from “its smell.” We see no error here. One familiar with the characteristics of whiskey may, without having made a chemical analysis, identify a liquid as such from observation, State v. Hirtle, 47 R. I. 371, or from a sense of smell. Marschall v. Laughran, 47 Ill. App. 29; 22 C. J. 554. Cf. King v. Ohio Valley Ins. Co., 212 Ky. 770 (gasoline). The distinctive smell of beer, warrants application of the same rule. Evidence derived from one’s senses may be worth much or little according to circumstances. Its *402 weight is for the jury. Possibility of error does not render it inadmissible. No prejudice was suffered by the denial of defendant’s motion to strike out.

The next error asserted is the allowance by the court of a copy of the receipt, Exhibit 21, for the liquor seized. This occurred when the State asked defendant for the original receipt and met with no response. One of defendant’s contentions had been that no seized objects could properly be put in evidence unless they were set forth on the return on the warrant and the receipt given to defendant at the time of the seizure. In this the court sustained defendant.

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144 A. 150 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
143 A. 604, 49 R.I. 397, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fish-ri-1928.