State v. Willey

125 S.E. 83, 97 W. Va. 253, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 191
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 83 (State v. Willey) 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. Willey, 125 S.E. 83, 97 W. Va. 253, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 191 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

Defendant prosecutes this writ of error from a judgment of the Criminal Court of Marion County pronounced June 30, 1923, and from a judgment of the Circuit Court of that County refusing writ of error entered February 20, 1924. On an indictment for unlawfully selling- liquors, a jury found him guilty, and the court sentenced him to confinement in jail for sixty days and to pay a fine of $300.00.

Error is predicated on the giving and refusing of instructions, the order in which they were given; refusal of the court to instruct the jury to disregard remarks made by the court in the progress of the trial tending to prejudice defendant; refusal to admit proper and material evidence; and refusal to set aside the verdict as contrary to the evidence.

Bernard Murphy, the prosecuting witness, testified that he had purchased from defendant a bottle of what he termed moonshine liquor for which he paid $4.00 at Frank Murphy’s pool room in the City of Fairmont, on May 12, 1923. He was accompanied by Hatmaker, having arrived in the City of Fairmont that day in his automobile in company with Hat-maker and two young women. Upon arriving at the pool room he met defendant and asked him if he had any liquor, and was answered in the affirmative. After he had finished a game of pool then in progress he sent Hatmaker to defendant to tell him to come to the rear of the pool room where there was an urinal, partially enclosed by a partition, and where the purchase and delivery was made. He and Hatmaker then retired from the pool room and drank some of the liquor. Afterwards he drove out of the City 'in his car accompanied by Olive Jackson, and while parked on the Hillcrest road he was arrested by officers about 8 :30 P. M., for what reason it does not clearly appear, and taken to the office of the prosecuting attorney. The bottle of liquor was found in a pocket in the car and brought into the prosecuting attorney’s office. After talking with the prosecuting attorney no charge *256 was preferred against him, but a warrant was issued for the arrest of defendant, and at the following grand jury term of court the indictment against defendant was found on his evidence. He was asked on cross-examination if he was promised immunity that night in the prosecuting attorney’s office, for the purpose, as stated, upon inquiry from the court, of showing whether his evidence was voluntary. The court then remarked: “If he changed his evidence because of any promise of immunity and tells anything but the truth about it, he would be held for perjury before he left the witness box.” Counsel excepted to the remark, and asked the court to instruct the jury to disregard it, which the court declined to do. This is one of the errors alleged. The witness then said he had not been promised immunity. Asked if he was not testifying in order that he might save his automobile from confiscation under the prohibition laws, and where his automobile then was, or if it had been confiscated, the court, upon objection, would not let the witness answer, and the record was vouched to the effect that if the witness was permitted to answer he would say that he then had possession of the car and it had not been taken by any officer. The court then remarked that the evidence was not material, but he would permit the witness to answer. The witness then said that his car had not been confiscated. Objection was made to the remark of the court that the evidence was immaterial and counsel moved an instruction to disregard the Judge’s remark, which motion was refused. This is assigned as error. The witness was then asked if on the day he made the indictment, or in the week the indictment was returned, if he did not go to the restaurant in the building where Murphy’s pool room was' operated and inquire for defendant, and then and there asked Nim Satterfield, in the presence of Walter Chase, to tell “Doggie” (meaning defendant) that, “I am sorry I had to do it, but it was the only way I had of saving my car and tell him that I will pay his fine.” The court then inquired of counsel if he was laying a foundation for contradiction, and being informed that it was for that purpose if the witness denied the conversation, the court said the evidence was immaterial whether witness did have such conversation, but he would permit the witness to answer. The remarks of *257 the court as to the materiality of the evidence was excepted to. The witness then denied the conversation, and said he did not know Nim Satterfield. Later in the trial upon repetition of the question to Murphy as to the time of the conversation and giving the exact language used by him in that conversation, the court refused to permit the witness to answer, holding that it was immaterial whether he made the purported inquiry or had the conversation; and being on an immaterial matter foundation for contradiction could not be laid. Exceptions were* taken to the ruling and remarks of the court. When Satterfield and Chase were examined they were asked if they had the conversation at the time and place above set out with Murphy, the prosecution witness, and the court refused to permit them to answer, and the record was vouched to the effect that Murphy had the conversation detailed above with Satterfield in the presence of Chase.

Hatmaker partly corroborated Murphy’s testimony about the purchase of the liquor. He says he sent “Doggie” Willey to the rear of the pool room at the request of Murphy. He was not.present at the purchase. After Murphy came out of the room he joined him, and they took a drink of liquor out of a bottle in Murphy’s possession. He says it was “moonshine liquor.”

Defendant denied having made the sale to Murphy. He admits that he was in the pool room and that some one told him a man wanted to see him in the rear; he went back and found Murphy near the urinal. He says, however, that' Murphy, whom he casually knew, asked him to take a drink of moonshine liquor with him which he declined to do; that he saw m> liquor of any kind there, and that was all that occurred. The evidence of other witnesses tend to corroborate him. That night about 1:30 o’clock he was arrested on the charge, taken to the sheriff ’suffice where Murphy and several other persons were congregated, and lodged in jail.

This direct conflict in the evidence has been determined by the jury in favor of the State. The State’s evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict; and it was not error to refuse the motion to set aside the verdict because it waS; contrary to the evidence. But counsel says the evidence does not sustain the verdict because the State failed to show that the liquor was *258 intoxicating. Hatmaker said the liquor was “moonshine” liquor. Under Sec. 1, Chap. 32-A of the Code, all malt, vinous or spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, beer, or any other intoxicating drink are embraced in the word “liquors” as used in the Act. Under Sec. 3 of that Chapter, the Section under which the indictment was found, any person who makes a sale of any “liquors” is guilty of a misdemeanor; hence, if. a sale of any malt, vinous or spirituous liquors, wine, porter, ale, beer,' be proven, it is not necessary to prove that they are intoxicating. Moonshine liquor is made by distillation by means of a still, and is spirituous in its nature. It falls within the class of liquors embraced within Section 1 of the Prohibition Act. State v. Dennison, 85 W. Va. 262; State v. Hussion, 91 W. Va. 146.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 83, 97 W. Va. 253, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-willey-wva-1924.