State v. Nichols

49 S.W.2d 14, 330 Mo. 114, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 14 (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, 49 S.W.2d 14, 330 Mo. 114, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 694 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*118 ELLISON, J.

The defendant-appellant was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court of Stoddard County (on change of venue) on a charge of transporting moonshine in Dunklin County, and his punish-^ v ment assessed at two years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.,/As we have concluded the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded we shall discuss only two of the many assignments of error: one challenging the sufficiency of the State’s evidence; and the other complaining of the circuit court’s action in overruling his plea in abatement, which assailed its jurisdiction.

The facts may be summarized as follows. The sheriff of Dunklin County and two of his deputies obtained information from some source that W. IT. (Bill) Nichols, the appellant’s father, would be either delivering or receiving whiskey on a certain night somewhere along the highway south of Kennett, the county seat. They obtained a search warrant for the father’s automobile and about ten o’clock that night, which was dark and cloudy, started on a scouting trip. They had not seen the appellant for two years, did not know he was in the county, and were not expecting to encounter him.

Presently the officers were passed by the automobile they sought and recognized the elder Nichols in it but neither of the other two passengers, except that the sheriff’s' wife, who was also a deputy sheriff, thought one of them was the appellant. Another strange car, which has nothing to do with this case, was closely following. These two cars were going one way, the officers were headed the other. They switched off the lights of their automobile, turned around in the road, threw on their lights again and started back after the Nichols car, having it in view until and while it stopped opposite a filling station 400 or 500 yards further down the highway. The strange car passed and went on. The elder Nichols got out and crossed over to the station. The officers drove up and the sheriff alighted and informed Nichols he had a warrant to search the automobile, Nichols disclaimed ownership thereof.

At about the same time one of the deputy sheriffs approached the car with a flash light. The appellant, Hugh Nichols, was seated' in *119 tbe driver’s position. The occupants slammed the. door on the officer’s hand and started in flight. Their engine had been running all this time. The deputy sheriff shot a hole in one rear'tire and all the officers followed in pursuit, in their automobile. The sheriff testified he could have overtaken the fugitives if .he had desired but that he preferred to let them run on. About a quarter of a mile from the filling' station they veered to one side of the road and threw out a glass gallon jug which shattered On the concrete pavement. The officers’ ear was then behind them not more than 50 to 100 yards. Something like a half mile further on the fleeing car stopped and the two occupants got out or were in the act of getting out and approaching the officers when the latter drew up. The appellant complained strenuously about the shooting of his tire. The other occupant of the car proved to be a man named Barnett.

The officers took both into custody, put them into their automobile and drove back up the road to where the bottle had been thrown out. The concrete pavement was wet with the contents thereof. No' one else had passed during the intervening time. The "officers mopped up some of the liquid with a man’s handkerchief and carried it back to the county seat, where they squeezed it into a vial and preserved it. This liquid was introduced in evidence at the trial and shown to be moonshine. "When the parties got back to the filling station the elder Nichols had gone. . ’ ' .

The defendant stood on his demurrer to the-State’s evidence and offered no testimony. , .

I. The appellant contends the State failed to make a case for several reasons. First, it is asserted the evidence wholly fails to show there was liquor in the Nichols car before it stopped at the filling station; and that the gallon bottle of moonshine which the boys threw away in their flight therefore may have been received and put in the car at the filling station before the officers drove up. If this is true, says appellant’s learned counsel, the moonshine had not yet been transported when the search warrant was presented, 'and the act of appellant in running- away was referable to a desire to protect his father, betokens a lack of criminal intent, and does not constitute a crime. On this point the following cases are cited: State v. Varnell, 316 Mo. 169, 289 S. W. 844; State v. Huff, 317 Mo. 299, 296 S. W. 121; State v. Corp (Mo.), 22 S. W. (2d) 774.

We are not able to accept this view either of the facts or the law. The testimony of the sheriff was that after lie had turned his automobile around and was following the Nichols car, he had it in view as it pulled up to and stopped opposite the filling -station, and thereafter. And while he and the other officers-were not asked categorically whether they saw any liquor put in the car, yet they described *120 the movements of the elder Nichols and what occurred; and the necessary inference is that no liquor was received at that place, and that the moonshine later thrown away by the defendant already was in the car. [State v. Bishop, 317 Mo. 477, 482, 296 S. W. 147, 148.]

But even if the fact be otherwise we cannot see how it will help the appellant. Suppose it were true the moonshine had been put in the automobile at the filling station, and that on the arrival of the officers the defendant fled with it; would that not be transportation? Or suppose, as also is suggested, the liquor had been in the car all the time, but the appellant was ignorant of its presence until the officers announced they had a search warrant, and then he fled; would that not be transportation? The decisions cited by appellant do not say to the contrary.

In the Varnell case, the defendant was charged with being an accessory after the fact to the commission of a felony. It was merely held the evidence was insufficient because there was no proof the defendant knew the principal had committed a felony; and none that the defendant assisted the principal in escaping, since ' the latter made no effort to escape. The case has no bearing on the instant facts. If the moonshine was in the car before the stop at the filling station, and the appellant knew it, he was an accomplice, or, at least, the jury would have been justified in so finding, State v. Bishop, supra, 317 Mo. l. c. 483, 296 S. W. l. c. 149; and an accomplice is not an accessory after the fact, State v. Umble, 115 Mo. 452, 461, 22 S. W. 378, 380. On the other hand, even though the moonshine was not put in the automobile until it reached the filling station, or the appellant did not know it until then, he should not be immune from prosecution for the independent crime of transportation committed thereafter, merely because, forsooth, his motive was to aid or abet his father in escaping the consequences of another offense.

In the Huff case the defendant was prosecuted for unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor. He had rented and lived in rooms owned by a woman to whom he was engaged to be married.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 14, 330 Mo. 114, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nichols-mo-1932.