State v. Girod

145 S.E. 269, 106 W. Va. 194, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 155
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1928
Docket5981
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 S.E. 269 (State v. Girod) 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. Girod, 145 S.E. 269, 106 W. Va. 194, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 155 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Maxweld, Judge:

The defendant was tried and convicted in the criminal court of Marion county on an indictment charging him with unlawfully and feloniously having in his possession a quantity of moonshine liquor. The statute, section 3 of Chapter 32A of the Code, makes the first offense under the act a misdemeanor, and the second offense a felony. The indictment in the present case alleges a former indictment and conviction, and a subsequent offense.

The officers with a search warrant entered defendant’s residence, one room of which was used as a grocery store, and found in a pantry, behind a pan hanging on the wall, two pint bottles containing moonshine liquor. On the second floor of the building was found ‘ ‘ a keg, about a sixteen gallon keg, about full of grape and raisin mash in a state of fermentation.” In an old abandoned street car, on defendant’s premises along side his house, some of the officers found a pop bottle containing moonshine liquor, under a shelf or counter against the wall. The defendant was in the house at the time, and was arrested. He denied knowledge of the liquor found in the pantry and the street car. When asked about the substance which the officers found on the second floor of his resi *196 dence, be said be had put some fresh black grapes up there, but denied the presence of the raisins and other materials.

Defendant’s son, a boy about sixteen years of age, testified that when on his way from school at noon he had found two pint bottles of liquor by a fence at the roadside, about one hundred yards from home, and had brought the bottles with him and had put them behind the pan in the pantry. He said he was going to tell his father about them, but “forgot everything about it. ’ ’ He was present when the search was made, but ‘ ‘ was afraid to tell it for a good while; I thought I might get a whipping. ’ ’ He said that he afterwards told his mother. She was not a witness on the trial. The officer who found the pop bottle of liquor in the old street car testified that the door was fastened, but he didn’t know whether it was locked or not; and that he removed a window in order to gain an entrance. The defendant said that he purchased the car and placed it on his premises with the intention of using it for a barber shop, and that he had not been inside of it since he bought it four or five months before the search. He denied any knowledge of the liquor found there, or of the door being locked. He said the children played in the car, and sometimes locked it when they went in or out.

The first point of error assigned and relied on for reversal is the action of the trial court in overruling defendant’s demurrer and motion to quash the indictment. It is contended that the indictment, showing on its face that the second offense charged was not committed within one year of the former conviction, does not charge a felony. For this proposition counsel rely on the first point of the syllabus in the case of State v. Zink, 98 W. Va. 338, which states: “An indictment property charging a former conviction of defendant of the offense of having in his possession a quantity of moonshine liquor and property charging a ‘second offense,’ namely, that defendant did unlawfully and feloniously have in his possession a quantity of moonshine liquor, the date of which is within one year from the former conviction charged, is good upon demurrer. ’ ’ Counsel for the defendant lay special emphasis upon the words appearing in said syllabus, “the *197 date of which is within, one year from the former conviction charged,” and apparently take the position that that expression is to be construed as a holding that the second offense must be within one year from the prior conviction, and that the indictment must so allege. We do not think the words quoted are properly susceptible to the construction urged. That was a certified ease on the sufficiency of an indictment, and this Court, in the syllabus, set forth the material allegations of the indictment before it and held them sufficient. It is not authority for the position which the defendant now urges.

The pertinent part of our statute, Code, Chapter 32 A, section 3, making a second offense for possession of intoxicating liquors a felony, reads: ‘ ‘ And' upon conviction of the same person for the second offense under this act, he shall be guilty of a felony and be confined in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than five years * * * and if it be a second offense it shall be so stated in the indictment returned * * The statute fixes no time within which the second offense must follow the first offense to constitute a felony. It was entirely Avithin the poAver of the legislature to fix a time, but it did not. In the absence of such legislative action, the courts would not be Avarranted in creating a time limit unless required by some other provision of law. We find none. True, an indictment for a misdemeanor, except petit larceny, must be returned within one year after the commission of the offense, Code, Chapter 152, section 10, but we are concerned here not with a misdemeanor but with a felony. The first offense does not enter into the equation save only that the fact of the conviction intensifies the character of the second offense.

On an indictment such as at bar, there is not involved a prosecution for the first offense, but solely the second, which is made more serious because of the first. We can not sustain the contention of defendant that “it takes two live misdemeanors under our prohibition law to constitute a felony for possession.”

The case of Wolfe v. State, 135 Ark. 574, is analagous. Under a statute increasing the penalty (but not constituting a felony) for second and subsequent offenses of betting on *198 liorse races, it was held that a defendant may be punished as for a second offense though the conviction for the first offense did not occur within one year before the return of the indictment for the second offense. It appears from the opinion that there is in that state a statute similar to our own placing a limitation of one year on initiation of prosecutions for misdemeanors. The court further said: “In some States the statute provides that in case of a subsequent conviction of the same person during the year, the punishment shall be increased. Under such statutes, of course, both the prior and subsequent offense must occur within the year. It will be observed that our statute contains no such limitation. It only provides an additional punishment for one who is convicted of crime after having been previously convicted of the same kind of crime. The prior offense only affects the punishment for the subsequent offense, and for that reason it is not necessary to charge and prove that the prior offense was committed within the statutory period for returning an indictment for the subsequent offense."

It is also complained that the indictment does not allege that the former conviction was carried out. This is not necessary. Under the statute the former conviction is the element that affects the later offense. The indictment clearly avers the conviction, and thus meets the requirement necessary in that particular.

State’s instructions Nos. 1, 3, 4 and 5 are challenged. Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.E. 269, 106 W. Va. 194, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-girod-wva-1928.