State v. Nichols

39 S.W.2d 777, 327 Mo. 1237, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 590
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 777 (State v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nichols, 39 S.W.2d 777, 327 Mo. 1237, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 590 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

HENWOOD, J.

— By an information filed in the Circuit Court of Randolph County, at Huntsville, it is charged that, on or about June 21, 1929, the defendant did unlawfully and feloniously manufacture “hootch, moonshine, corn whiskey.” The case was transferred to the Circuit Court of Randolph County, at Moberly, where the defendant was tried, found guilty “as charged,” and his punishment assessed, by the jury, at imprisonment in the peni *1239 tentiary for two years. He was sentenced accordingly, and appealed.

The evidence adduced by the State is substantially as follows:

On June 21, 1929, the Sheriff of Randolph County and two deputies went to the defendant’s home, about seven miles south of Moberly, in Randolph County, with a search warrant. They met the defendant’s brother at the gate, and he told them the defendant was eating dinner. 11 Someone come to the door and said: ‘ Mr. Nichols is eating dinner and is coming right out.’ ” About that time, one of the sheriff’s deputies saw a man in a “suspicious position” behind a door, inside of the house, “stooping over as if he was pouring something out,” and the deputy said to the sheriff, “I believe somebody is pouring out some stuff.” When the defendant came out of the house, the sheriff handed the search warrant to him, and told him he came there “for a raid, looking for liquor.” The sheriff and his deputies then proceeded to search the house and several outbuildings on the defendant’s premises. They found no liquor, but, at the place in the house where a man had been seen “stooping over as if he was pouring something out.” they found a hole in the floor, about three and a half inches wide and one foot long, with a wet spot around it, and they detected the odor of “hootch, moonshine and corn whiskey” at the hole. In a granary, they found a ten-gallon boiler, a heater with two burners, a pressure gas tank, two fifty-gallon barrels of mash, a tub of water, an empty tub, and a rubber tube. The boiler was resting on a stand, over the heater, and the two burners of the heater were connected with the pressure gas tank. The boiler was “damp inside and smelled like corn whiskey, hootch and moonshine,” and the bottom of the boiler was “black with soot.” On the lid of the boiler, there was a cap, with an opening in it, fastened “down tight” with, thumb screws, and there was an extension on the cap “for the attachment of the coil.” One of the barrels was full of mash, and the other barrel “had some in it — not very much.” The mash was composed of “corn chop and wheat and water,” and “it was in a fermenting state. ’ ’ During the progress of the search, the defendant told the sheriff “he had this still,” and “where it was at.” He “wanted” the sheriff to “overlook him and let him go.” In this conversation, the defendant said: “If you will let me go, I will not make any more corn liquor. I have been caught once. What will you take to let me go?” The sheriff told him he “couldn’t do nothing like' that.”

The foregoing statement of the State’s evidence is taken from the testimony of the sheriff and his deputies. Bach of them testified that he was familiar with the odor of moonshine whiskey. One of the deputies testified that hootch and moonshine may be made out of *1240 corn; or corn and wheat mixed, or peaches, or rye; and that, when hootch or moonshine is made out of corn, or corn and wheat mixed, it is corn whiskey. The boiler, heater, pressure gas tank, rubber tube, and a jug of mash, taken from one of the barrels, were produced at the trial, admitted in evidence, and exhibited before the jury.

The defendant testified: He had lived in Bandolph County eighteen or nineteen years, and five years on the farm where the search was made. The boiler had been in his possession about four or five years, and the heater and pressure gas tank about five or six! years. He found the boiler “in the woods on Press Oliver’s place,” and “just took it.” Press Oliver was a colored man, and one of his neighbors. He bought the heater and pressure gas tank from “Mr. White,” a representative of the “new-soda-pop works.” One of the old burners on the-heater “wouldn’t burn,” and he bought a new burner at Murphy’s hardware store in Higbee. He had never had a worm or coil “to fit on this boiler,” and had never made any hootch, moonshine or corn whiskey “with this still.” The mash found by the officers was made of “just wheat,” and had been “soaking” only three days. “It. had not been on long enough to lie boiled out. ” He had been using the tubs in the granary in “mixing, feed,” for his hogs, out of “another barrel of mash.” There was a hole in the floor-of his house, but no liquor was poured “down the hole” the day of the .search. He “never named whiskey” in his conversation with the sheriff the day of the search. He pleaded .guilty, on November 18, 1927, “to having possession of a still,” and served a jail-sentence “for it.” When cross-examined as to his conversation with- the sheriff on the day of the search, he said: “I just told him I thought he ought not to arrest me; that he had not found anything.” When asked whether or not he told the sheriff he “would not do it again” if the sheriff would let him “go,” he said: “I don’t recollect whether I did or not-I wouldn’t say for sure, what T said to him.”

Mark Murphy testified, on behalf of the defendant, that he was engaged in the hardware business in Higbee, and that the defendant bought a “generator burner” from him sometime in June, 1929.

I. It is contended that the trial court erred in permitting the prosecuting attorney to amend the affidavit to the information during the trial, and in denying the defendant’s request for a postponement of the trial after such amendment had been made.

Jn this connection, the record shows the follow-mg proceedings: When the prosecuting attorney began the -examination of the first witness for the State, the defendant objected to the introduction of an7 evidence, *1241 on the ground that the information was defective, “because the filing mark on the information shows it was filed (June 24, 1929) a month before it was sworn to (July 24, 1929)/’ Thereupon, the prosecuting attorney stated that “the record of the clerk shows it was sworn to on the day it was filed, and asked, and was granted, leave to cñange the date of the affidavit from July 24, 1929, to June 24, 1929. When this amendment was made, the defendant filed an affidavit of surprise, in which he stated that he had relied on the insufficiency of the information as a complete defense, and asked that the trial be postponed for the purpose of allowing him “sufficient time” for the preparation of his defense on the merits. The prosecuting attorney then asked, and was granted, leave to verify the information instant er. When this was done, the defendant’s request for a postponement of the trial was denied, and the trial proceeded.

The Statute of Jeofails says that, in all prosecutions by information, ‘ ‘ any affidavit or information may be amended in matter of form or substance at any time by leave of court before the trial, and on the trial as to all'matters of form and variance, at the discretion of the court, when the same can be done without prejudice to the substantial rights of the defendant, on the merits, and no amendment shall cause any delay of the trial,

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 777, 327 Mo. 1237, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nichols-mo-1931.