State v. Lynch

243 N.W. 814, 62 N.D. 450, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 202
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1932
DocketFile No. Cr. 87.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 814 (State v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Lynch, 243 N.W. 814, 62 N.D. 450, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 202 (N.D. 1932).

Opinions

Nuessle, J.

The defendant was informed against for a violation of the prohibition law. The information charged that at various dates between June 8, 1929, and May 8, 1930, the defendant did wilfully and unlawfully keep for sale intoxicating liquor as a beverage. The defendant was arraigned and entered a plea of not guilty. The case was tried to a jury. At the close of the State’s case the defendant moved for a directed verdict and this motion being denied, defendant submitted no evidence. The jury returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty of the crime of unlawfully keeping for sale intoxicating liquor as a beverage as charged in the information. Judgment was entered on this verdict. Thereafter the defendant moved for a new trial. The motion was denied. Thereupon the defendant perfected this appeal from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The record tends to establish the following facts: On May 8, 1930, Everett Eoutier, the son and deputy of the sheriff of Eamsey county, was employed on the highway a short distance east of the city of Devils Lake. On the afternoon of that day he observed the defendant driving east along the highway. He reported'this to the sheriff. The sheriff and one Wright, a federal prohibition enforcement officer, at once drove out to the place where Everett was. They stationed themselves along the highway. About twenty minutes thereafter the defendant, driving a Nash coupe, approached from the east. The officers signaled him to stop. Though he was acquainted with the sheriff, instead of stopping he increased his speed and forced them out of the way at the 'risk of being run down. He continued his course toward the city, driving rapidly. Wright and Everett followed him in the latter’s Ford coupe. He reached the city limits with the officers in hot pursuit. He turned into 10th Avenue. After following this street for a short distance he *452 turned at right angles into 6th Street. He was-then driving at a- rate of.25 or 30 miles an hour, slowing at the corners. The officers were about one and a half or two blocks behind There are residences along 6th Street. So when he turned off 10th Avenue he was momentarily out of their sight. Soon thereafter he turned off 6th Street and slowed down. The officers .pursued him five or six blocks further and finally intercepted him. They searched his ear but found nothing. He said “I was lucky that time. You didn’t find anything.” Meanwhile, the sheriff drove, up. He had driven a different way. He took defendant to his office and locked him up. Then the sheriff and Wright at .once turned back along the course whence the defendant and Wright had come. They searched the roadside as they went. The witness Mrs. Gilbertson lived on 6th Street, in the third house from 10th Avenue. She testified that on the afternoon of May 8, between five and six o’clock, she was sitting listening to the radio. She looked out of her window .and saw two cars, coupes, driving up 6th Street away from 10th Avenue. The second was a Ford. She could not say as to the make of the first. The first car, containing one man, slowed up momentarily in front of her house and, without stopping, the occupant threw a package containing tin cans out on the parking beside the street. A short time afterward the second car, which the witness said contained but one man, followed. Within a few minutes a grocery delivery wagon drove along the street, stopped, and the driver picked up tire package which had been thrown out. Though Mrs. Gilbertson as she listened to her radio looked out of her window toward the street, she saw no other cars pass along it. When the sheriff and Wright, retracing the course taken by Wright in pursuit of the defendant came along 6th Street, Mrs. Gilbertson saw them. She came out of her house and asked them if they had lost a package. The sheriff said: “Where is it ?” and she told him that the delivery truck had picked it up. The delivery man testified that he had been delivering groceries that afternoon. He drove over to 6th Street in front of Mrs. Gilbertson’s house, saw a package, and picked it up. This package contained three tin gallon cans which he later turned over to the sheriff. Just before he picked up the package he was on 5th Street. At that time he observed two cars driving up 10th Avenue at a rate of 25 or 30 miles an hour. Noth were coupes. The second was a Ford. The first car was some *453 what larger. They turned off 10th Avenue, but he did not observe where. The cans which the delivery man found and later turned over to the sheriff, were sealed and contained a liquid. This liquid was analyzed by a chemist who testified that it was potable ethyl alcohol.

Appellant’s first contention is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict of guilty as returned by the jury, in that it does not warrant a finding that the alcohol which was thrown by the wayside and later recovered by the sheriff was in the possession of the defendant, and that even though the defendant had such alcohol in his possession there is no evidence in the record from which it can be said he had it for unlawful sale as a beverage.

It is true that the evidence is wholly circumstantial. And, as the defendant contends, circumstances that are sufficient only to arouse suspicion will not sustain a conviction. In order to warrant a verdict of guilty on circumstantial evidence alone it must be such as to exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than that of the defendant’s guilt. United States v. Reder (D. C.) 69 Fed. 965. But we think the evidence in this case meets this requirement. The defendant fled when he saw the sheriff. Closely pursued, he turned off 10th Avenue into Sixth street and passed the spot where the alcohol was thrown out. Tie was then momentarily out of sight of his pursuers. Shortly thereafter he slowed the pace at which he was driving and permitted the officers to overtake him.' When they searched his car he said: “That time I was lucky. You didn’t find anything.” Mrs. Gilbertson saw two ears, one closely following the other and corresponding in description to the cars driven by the defendant and the car in which Wright pursued him. She saw the package (later found to contain alcohol) thrown out in front of her house, but she could not identify the occupant of the car from which it was thrown. It is true she says that the second car contained but one person, whereas both Wright and Everett Boutier were in the pursuing car. On the other hand, she says that though she was looking out of her window she observéd no other two cars pass. Shortly thereafter she saw the delivery man pick up the package. The delivery man who found and picked up the alcohol saw two ears driving up 10th Avenue. They also corresponded in description with the defendant’s qar and the car which pursued him. These cars were being driven at about the rate of speed to which Wright *454 testified. They turned off 10th Avenue. About five minutes thereafter the delivery man found the alcohol which was thrown from the first of the two cars on 6th Street. All of these occurrences took place within.the space of a-very few moments. They clearly and certainly point to the defendant as the driver of the car from which the alcohol was thrown.

The liquid in the cans which were recovered by the sheriff was potable alcohol. The prosecution was brought under chapter 83 of the Penal -Code, being §§ 10,092 et seq.,' Comp. Laws 1913, as amended. Section 10,128, Comp.

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Related

State v. Stern
254 N.W. 765 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 814, 62 N.D. 450, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lynch-nd-1932.