Taylor v. State

1926 OK 579, 247 P. 377, 118 Okla. 262, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 900
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 22, 1926
Docket16516
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1926 OK 579 (Taylor v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. State, 1926 OK 579, 247 P. 377, 118 Okla. 262, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 900 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

■Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the county courc of Canadian county forfeiting to the state of Oklahoma a certain Buick automobile, found by the court below to have been! used in the unlawful transportation of intoxicating liquor. The proceedings originated by the filing, on .the 20th day of April, 1925, oí an affidavit sworn to by one Charles Gray, charging that a certain Buick automobile therein described had been used, on the 19th of April, 1925, in Canadian county, Olda., in conveying and transporting intoxicating liquor from a point unknown to affiant to a described location in Canadian CGunty, in violation of the laws of the state of Oklahoma. The affidavic concluded with a prayer that the automobile be confiscated to the state as provided by law.

Thereafter, and on the 14th clay of May, 1925, the plaintiff in error, Inez Taylor, filed in said courc her plea of intervention, in which she alleged that she was the owner and in the lawful possession of the automobile at the time of the seizure thereof; denied that said car was being used for the transportation of intoxicating: liquors in violation of the prohibitory laws of Oklahoma; and claimed that the seizure was unlawful and without .authority of law, and prayed that the same he returned to her. and that the proceeding be dismissed at the cost of the state.

A jury was waived and the cause tried to the court, resulting in a judgment of confiscation rendered on May 28, 1925, from wbich judgment, and freim an order overruling her motion for a new trial, the inter-vener duly excepted, and brings the cause regularly on appeal to this court for review, claiming that the judgment was not supported by the evidence, and to contrary to law.

There is no ma cental dispute as to the facts. It is disclosed by the record ibat Charles Gray, by whom the affidavit or complaint referred to above was signed, held a commission as special deputy sheriff from the sheriff of Canadian coiunty on the 19bb day of April, 1925. but which carried with it no authority to serve crimina'l process. It appears that on the 19th day of April. 1925, the plaintiff in error, Inez Tajlor. accompanied by Will Taylor. Otie Windon, *263 John Wesley, ,and John Smith, had driven the automobile i’n question from Chiekasha «-to El Reno; that upon arrival at El Reno ihey met another negro by the name of Anderson Stephenson, who got into the car with the other parties, after which they drove out to the aviation field near El Reno, where an exhibition of some sort was going on; that while en route from El Reno to the aviation field, flies* all took two drinks of whisky, which was contained in a half-gallon fruit jar; that when they arrived at the aviation field the traffic at thac point was so congested that they could not proceed further, and an altercation ensued among- the occupants of the car, all of whom were more or less under tlie influence of whisky. As the c,ar approached the aviation field on the occasion in question, the sheriff's deputy, Charles Gray, followed them a distance of from 40 to 80 feet, the deputy stopping his car about three feet from the automobile in question. Hearing the quarreling and disorder going on among the occupants of the front car, the sheriff’s deputy went to the ear ami placed a'll of them under arrest, and directed Anderson Stephenson to drive the car to the police station in El Reno, where all of the occupants of the car, except Anderson Stephenson, were placed in jail, and the car turned over to the chief of police, in whose custody it remained until after the confiscation proceedings were finally concluded. After the parties were placed under arrest it appears that a fight took place between John Smith and John Wesley, in which Wesley sustained certain injuries necessitating his removal to a hospital.

All of the parties were lodged in jail and charges filed against alll of them for unlawfully transporting intoxicating liquor. The sheriff’s deputy testified that in returning from the aviation field to the City Hall, he rode on the running- board of the car, and that while en route he discovered, for the first time, the fruit jar containing a small quantity of whisky; that John Smith was attempting to pour out the contents of the jar. a part of which contents was absorbed by a red sweater lying in the hot'om of the car, from which he subsequently wrung a small quantity of the whisky, and the same was introduced as evidence at the trial.

The sheriff’s deputy testified that he held no warrant authorizing: him to search the car, or to- arrest the occupants thereof, and that he did not know that the car contained any intoxicating liquor ar the time he seized the automobile and placed its occupants under arrest.

The trial court, among other things, found as follows:

“That said intervener was at that time placed under arrest by Charles Gray, a special deputy sheriff of Canadian county, Okla., because of a breach of peace by said inter-vener in the presence of said officer, and that thereafter and incident to said arrest said Charles Gray seized said Buick automobile.”

There are several assignments of error relied upon by plaintiff in error for a- reversal of the judgment, buit in our view or the case it will only be necessary to consider rlie 8 th assignment as follows:

“The court erred in rendering judgment of confiscation because the admitted facts showed that the car was .seized without warrant and no- offense was being- committed by the car against the prohibitory law in the presence of the pretended officer when the seizure was made, and his attempted seizure was unlawful.”

As we interpret the statute, section 7014, C. O. S. 1921, it is only when the officer observes the car transporting intoxicating liquor, and knows of his own knowledge unci from his own observation that the car is actually transporting intoxicating liquors, that he -is authorized to seize it without a warrant. That jie may have observed that the -car was being used in connection with the commission of some public offense other than a violation of the prohibitory laws of the state in his presence, would give him no right to seize the car, although it might authorize him to place the occupants thereof under arrest if they were committing a public offense in his- immediate presence. The arrest of the occupants of the ear for a breach of the peace would not authorize! the seizure of the automobile as an incident te-che arrest, merely because the persons arrested occupied the car at the time they committed the breach of peace.

The .only situation in which <a seizure of an automobile without a warrant would be justified, would be its employment in the presence of the officer in transporting intoxicating liquor in violation of the prohibitory law. In the instant case the sheriff’s deputy admitted that he did not see the whisky until after the arrest, and while he was en route with the occupants of the car to the police station, when, for the first time, he discovered the container with its contents running out of the car on to the running board.

We are not concerned in the instant case with the guilt or innocence of the person whose property may have been seized. The *264

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Related

Byford v. State
1949 OK CR 128 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1949)
Washington v. State
64 P.2d 926 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 579, 247 P. 377, 118 Okla. 262, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-state-okla-1926.