State v. Thomas

143 S.E. 88, 105 W. Va. 346, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 65
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1928
Docket5937
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 143 S.E. 88 (State v. Thomas) 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. Thomas, 143 S.E. 88, 105 W. Va. 346, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 65 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

Defendant was convicted in the criminal court of Marion county and sentenced to two years in the penitentiary and fined, -on an indictment for unlawfully and feloniously owning, operating, maintaining, possessing, and having an interest in, etc., a moonshine still. A writ of error having been refused by the circuit court of said county, defendant prosecutes error to this Court.

On or about four o’clock in the afternoon of December 12, 1925, E. L. Hawkins, a Federal prohibition officer, together with state trooper Gladwell and certain other officers, 'being in possession of a warrant issued on the information of Glad-well for the search of the house and premises of defendant, proceeded to Peacock Terrace, a suburb of Fairmont, for the purpose of executing the same. On alighting from the car, they were at once apprised by the odor present that a moonshine still was under operation in the immediate vicinity. And, by means of the increasing pungency of this odor near the dwelling they were led into the house and upstairs to the bathroom where a sixty gallon moonshine still was found in operation, and where, as one officer puts it, ‘ ‘ The fumes of the odor from it was so strong we could hardly stay in the room.” The still was actually going at the time and the liquor from the coil was dripping into a bucket and wash boiler. According to Gladwell: “The hot plate was setting down in the bathtub and the still was setting on the hot plate. There was a rubber hose running from the hot plate to a gas connection. The gas was turned on and burning. The still was filled up *349 with mash. There was a rubber hose running in at the top and the water running out and running into the bathtub under the still and then running down the drain pipe. The liquor was running irom the still into charcoal, and from that into a copper wash boiler setting there.” Twenty-three gallons of apple brandy whiskey, three full barrels of apple mash, five empty mash 'barrels, 200 pounds brown sugar, ten empty whiskey cans, two funnels, one copper wash boiler used to catch whiskey in, three pieces rubber hose- used on the still, and several small kettles and dippers were also found in the house. Defendant was not present at the time. However, he was -soon after apprehended on his way home, and after reaching the house, said to one of the officers, “Well, boys, you got me. I am in a hell of a shape with this stuff on me.” He did not testify.

The principal ground of error stressed is that the search warrant is invalid. We have said that on the question of its validity the warrant itself is the best evidence. State v. Slat, 98 W. Va. 448. The warrant under consideration here is admittedly valid on its face. It purports to have been issued on a complaint duly sworn to by a member of the Department of Public Safety. The sole attack on its validity is that the affidavit was not in fact sworn to, and is therefore violative of the provision of our Constitution that no such warrant shall issue “except upon probable cause, supported* by oath or affirmation.” Article 3, Section 6. Such attack is founded alone on the cross-examination of the justice who issued the warrant, as follows: “Did Mr. G-ladwell swear to this complaint? A. Well, I don’t know as I swore him to that particular complaint, no sir. Q. The fact of the matter was, that Mr. Gladwell' merely signed the complaint and you acknowledged it, but did not swear him. Is that not true? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you say that was true ? A. That is true, yes, sir. ’ ’ The State seeks to uphold the warrant on the grounds (1) that it is against public policy to permit the officer to impeach his act, and (2) even' if not so, that the evidence of the justice here relied on is insufficient to overbear a paper valid on its face. Counsel for both the State and the defendant admitted in argument on the hearing that *350 tiie exact point raised Rere has never been determined by this Court. However, we do not decide -this question, since our view of the case mates it immaterial.

From the evidence, we find that as the officers alighted from their car, odor from a moonshine still in operation was in evidence. Hawkins, stated “As soon as we got -out of the car, I smelled the odor of a still in operation.” This was outside the close of the defendant. The officers were unerringly led by means of the growing intensity of this odor to the still in operation in the house of the defendant. An offense can be said to be committed in the presence of an officer when he sees it with his own eyes or sees one or more series of acts constituting the offense, and is aided by his other senses. State v. Lutz, 85 W. Va. 330. In such case no warrant is necessary. Here the sense of smell told the officer that a felony was being committed within the house of the defendant. In U. S. v. Rembert, 284 Fed. 996, which involved the question of whether or not an officer had the right to arrest a person whom he believed to be intoxicated and search his person for liquor without a warrant, the court said: “If the court can find in any case that the officer had a bona fide belief that by his senses he had detected or discovered a violation of the law, and if in the opinion of the court the evidence of the senses on which the officer acted was sufficient ground for the officer reaching that belief, then the arrest must be held justified, and the evidence obtained on it legal. ” In a case where the officers were lawfully on certain premises, and while engaged there saw a light in the cellar of a house two or three doors away, and detected the odor of raisins cooking, the officers proceeded to the house and entering the cellar found a still in operation. The court, in passing on whether or not the odor of the cooking raisins was sufficient to warrant an arrest without a warrant, and to seize the evidence, stated: “If an officer may arrest when he actually sees the commission of a misdemeanor or a felony, why may he not do the same if the sense of smell informs him that a crime is being committed? Sight is but one of the senses, and an officer may be so trained that the sense of smell is 'as unerring as the sense of sight. These officers have *351 said that there is that in the odor of boiling raisins which through their experience told them that a crime in violation of revenue law was in progress. That they were so skilled that they could thus detect through the sense of smell is not controverted. I see no reason why the power to arrest may not exist if the act of commission appealed to the sense of smell as well as to that of sight.” U. S. v. Borkowski, 263 Fed. 408; Cornelius on Search & Seizure, 292.

That the officer may act on this one sense is no longer an open question in this State. In State v. Snodgrass, 91 W. Va. 553, it was held that the testimony of a witness is not limited to the facts observed by him-through any one of the senses. Information communicated through any of his senses is proper matter of evidence, if otherwise pertinent. Judge Ritz, speaking for the Court in that case, said: “Nor can we reverse the judgment upon the ground that the evidence did not justify the defendant’s conviction. He contends that he was convicted upon the evidence of the sheriff and his deputy which they procured by the exercise of the sense of smell alone, and that this,being -the ease, it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 S.E. 88, 105 W. Va. 346, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thomas-wva-1928.