State v. Whitecotten

133 S.E. 106, 101 W. Va. 492, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 207
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1926
DocketNo. 5335.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 106 (State v. Whitecotten) 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. Whitecotten, 133 S.E. 106, 101 W. Va. 492, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 207 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

On May 23, 1924, a warrant was issued by a justice of Marshall County, commanding the arrest of Ray Whitecotten, and the search of the Thomas J. Earliwine farm in Sand Hill District of said county. The warrant was executed forthwith by Benton Hazlett, Deputy Sheriff, accompanied by H. E. Smith, a Federal Prohibition agent. The officers found and arrested Ray Whitecotten, Fred Whitecotten and Harry Jefferson in a house on the Earliwine farm, which house was leased to Charles Hollish. In the same house was a fifty gallon still complete, and three hundred gallons of mash. On the wall above the mash barrels was a batch of' papers containing an account of stilling operations. The account makes reference to three partners, which it terms “No. 1”, “No. 2”, and “No. 3”, except in one instance when the partners are referred to as follows:

“Shares of 3 parteners as following
Ray Share, $24.90
Fraid Share, $24.90
Charley Share, $17.90”

Charles Hollish, Fred Whitecotten, and Ray Whitecotten were indicted jointly at the Sept., 1924, term of the Circuit Court of Marshall County. The indictment charged them with feloniously owning, operating and having an interest in an apparatus for the manufacture of intoxicating liquors, etc. At the trial the State proved without contradiction the facts above stated. Officers Hazlett and Smith also testified that both Fred and Ray Whitecotten voluntarily stated to them at the time of the arrest on May 23, 1924, in the presence of Harry Jefferson and C. B. Crow, a taxicab driver, that Harry *494 Jefferson bad nothing to do with the still, and that it was owned jointly by them (Fred and Ray) and Charles Hollish. Smith stated that Fred and Ray made practically the same assertions, on the morning following the arrest, in the presence of himself, Hazlett and Lloyd Arnold, the Prosecuting Attorney.

Fred denied making the statements attributed to him by the officers, but he did not support his denial by the testimony of Crow, Jefferson, or Arnold. Fred said that on May 23, 1924, he was engaged in the business of buying and selling second hand automobiles; that he had information that Hol-lish was in the market for an automobile, and in company with Jefferson and Ray he went to see Hollish about making a deal with him; that Jefferson was looking for farm work, but he did not know why Ray went along; that when they arrived at the place Hollish lived, Hollish was on the point of leaving and asked them to wait until he came back; that while awaiting the return of Hollish the officers arrived; and that he did not own, operate or have any interest in the still at the Hollish house.

The jury found Fred guilty. Its verdict was sustained by the trial court, and Fred was given the minimum sentence under the statute. Error is charged to the several rulings of the trial court on (1) motions for a continuance and to take a deposition, (2) the admission of evidence under the search warrant, and (3) the instructions.

(1). In support of a motion for a continuance the defendant filed an affidavit which is in part as follows:

“Affiant was arrested at the building where a still was alleged to have been found. This affiant says that he went there in company with Ray Whiteeotten, and at his suggestion, for the sole and only purpose of trying to sell an automobile, and Ray Whiteeotten will so testify. Ray White-cotten knows that this affiant had no interest in the still, and did not own, operate or possess it, 'and Ray'Whiteeotten knows important facts and circumstances showing or tending to show that this affiant had no interest and did not own, possess or operate the said still. And these facts and circum *495 stances as well as the object of affiant’s visit to tbe place where this still was found, are known to Ray Whiteeotten and to no other witness. And affiant can not prove these facts, which are material facts, to his defense, by any other witness.”

The defendant contends that the affidavit contained every requisite necessary to obtaining a continuance.

Sec. 6, Ch. 131, Code, requires that an affidavit for a continuance should contain the “name of the witness, and the testimony he is expected to give”. Reasonable definiteness is required in stating such testimony. State v. Jones, 84 W. Va. 85 (88). The only definite testimony mentioned in the affidavit which Ray was expected to give, is that Fred was in the building where the still was found, for the sole and only purpose of selling an automobile. The remainder of the affidavit relates to facts and circumstances known to Ray, but undisclosed to the court, which the affiant says show or tend to show that affiant had no interest in the still. In other words, the affidavit contains merely the conclusion of the affiant as to the materiality of the facts and circumstances known to Ray. The purpose of an affidavit for a continuance in such a ease is to place before the court the facts to- which the absent witness will testify, in order that the court may determine the value of such testimony to the defendant. Its materiality is not left to the opinion of the affiant, and the court cannot determine this materiality upon the mere statement that the absent witness knows facts material to the defense. To say that the witness knows facts, without disclosing to the court what these facts are, gives the court no information as to what the facts may be. No contention would be made that an affidavit justified a continuance on the bare assertion that the affiant himself knows facts material to his defense, which he is unable to prove until a later term of court. It is no more a compliance with the statute when an affiant says, as in this affidavit, that someone else knows facts material to his defense, when such facts are not disclosed.

The view we take of this affidavit is not unusual or unduly technical. It is generally supported by the authorities. “In deciding on the sufficiency of an affidavit for a continuance,

*496 no presumption favorable to the applicant is to be indulged. Such an affidavit, like a pleading, is to be construed most strongly against the party presenting it, and all intendments, so far as it is equivocal or uncertain, must be taken against it.” 13 C. J., p. 182, par. 122. In State v. Adams, 56 Fla. 1, the court held that the grounds for a motion for a continuance should be scanned more closely in a criminal case than in a civil one, because of the “superior temptation” in a criminal case to delay the trial. In State v. Boyd, 33 Fla. 613, it was specifically held that an affidavit • for a continuance was insufficient that failed to state the facts to be testified to by the absent witness, but gave in effect only the opinion of the witness as to the guilt of the accused. In Glenn v. Brush, 3 Col. 26, an affidavit for continuance was held insufficient because it did not state with reasonable certainty facts to enable the court to determine the materiality of the evidence. In Olds v. Glaze,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 106, 101 W. Va. 492, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-whitecotten-wva-1926.