Trapp v. State

1954 OK CR 43, 268 P.2d 913, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 274
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 31, 1954
DocketA-11947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1954 OK CR 43 (Trapp v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trapp v. State, 1954 OK CR 43, 268 P.2d 913, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 274 (Okla. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

• POWELL, Presiding Judge.

The plaintiff in error has appealed from a conviction in the court of common pleas of Tulsa County for the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor, where the court sentenced her to serve a term of thirty days in the county jail, and pay a fine of $50.

A trial by jury was waived.

The evidence on motion to suppress disclosed that Roy Rains and Fred Stapp, deputy sheriffs of Tulsa County, obtained a search warrant for defendant’s home located at 124 North Nogales Avenue, Tulsa. On arrival the officers found Mrs. Trapp' and one of her neighbors, Mrs. Cecil Boone, the owner and lessor of the residence occupied by defendant, sitting in the living room. A man by the name of Bink Thompson, shown on motion to suppress to have been a bootlegger, was also sitting in the living room. The officers found a quantity of liquor in a secret compartment under the kitchen sink, where there was a trap door going into the wall. This door was so well concealed that it required the officers much time in locating it. There were 16 pints and 9 one-half' pints of tax-paid whiskey discovered. The two officers were the only witnesses that testified. The defendant did not testify and introduced no evidence.

Witness. Rains testified that Mrs. Trapp was a married woman and that the place searched was a residence. Deputy Stapp. testified that the described property was a private residence and was not equipped as a commercial place. He also testified':

“Q. Do you know by what right Mrs. Jack Trapp occupied this house at the time?- A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What was that? A. They rented it as their home.
“Q. From whom? A. From the Boones, Mrs. Cecil Boone.”

Mr. Rains was asked by the defense attorney :

*915 “What was said, do you know? A. I told her, I said, ‘You have a.very good whiskey plant; this is an order, permit that we seize that, the cache.’ She said: ‘It.isn’t any good now.’ ”

The evidence further disclosed that there were empty whiskey bottles on the back porch and outside.

At the close of the evidence on motion to suppress, the motion was by the court overruled. Thereupon it was stipulated that the evidence just heard might be considered as the evidence on trial, and thereupon counsel for defendant interposed a demurrer, and the case was continued until the next day, April 14, 1953. It was asserted that the evidence was insufficient in that it failed to establish or show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant charged was the actual owner and in possession of the liquor found; that there existed the inference of duress under the provisions of Tit. 21 O.S.1951 §§ 155, 157. The court overruled the demurrer and continued the case until April 18, for passing sentence, when judgment was entered as heretofore recited.

The sole questio'n for determination is whether the court erred in overruling the demurrer.

It is now urged by counsel that in that the evidence disclosed that the defendant was a married woman, and that the property seárched had been rented to the defendant and her husband by the Boones, that the inference of duress obtained, Tit. 21 O.S.1951 §§ 155, 157, and that it was therefore • incumbent on the State to have -shown beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant charged was the actual owner and in possession of the liquor found. Counsel cites the cases of Paris v. State, 66 Okl.Cr. 236, 90 P.2d 1078, and Lynch v. State, 68 Okl.Cr. 303, 98 P.2d 625 as decisive of the issue.

In the Paris case, this court held:

“In prosecution of married woman for unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor,- in her home, the presumption that she, in committing the offense in her husband’s presence, acted under his coercion, held, not rebutted.”

In the body of the opinion it was stated:

“In the case at bar a prima facie case of coercion was established when it was shown that the defendant was a married woman, occupying the premises with her husband as their home, and that the criminal act, if any, was in the presence of her husband. There was no evidence offered to show that she acted upon her own initiative, or that she acted freely and of her own volition, and there was no evidence offered to rebut the presumption that she acted under coercion of her husband.” [Italics now supplied.]

In Lynch v. State, supra, on appeal it was held that the search warrant involved was fatally defective. This determined the case. Mrs. Sam Lynch, the defendant, had been jointly charged with her husband with the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor, but had been tried separately. The evidence had shown that the husband and wife were living together with their eleven children and that the husband was present when the officers made the search of the home and obtained the liquor.

The only value of the Lynch case, so far as it may aid in the solution of the present case, arises by way of dicta contained in the opinion, and involving a quotation from Paris v. State, supra, and theretofore found in the case of Sentell v. State, 61 Okl.Cr. 229, 67 P.2d 466, 468. This quotation will presently be considered, but first we would summarize the facts developed in the Sen-tell case- and the court’s interpretation thereof.

It appears that both Ike Sentell and Zetta Sentell had been jointly charged with the unlawful possession of a still. The wife was tried separately from her husband and found guilty. The evidence had developed that certain officers had come to defendant’s farm home, found her ill in bed, had left with her a copy of a search warrant and thereafter found a whiskey still in operation in a shed about 100 yards from the home; a keg of whiskey was found and also some mash. The defendant testified that she and Ike Sentell, her husband lived together on the premises where the still was found; that her home was provided for her by her husband.and she occupied the same at his *916 discretion; that she had never been to the shed in which the still was found and her only information of said still was hearsay; that she had no interest or part in its operation; that there never was any whiskey brought into the house; that her husband left the house going to the shed about thirty minutes before the officers arrived.

In the body of the opinion, Doyle, J., speaking for the court said:

“In the instant case a prima facie case of coercion was established when it was shown that the defendant was a married woman, occupying the premises with her husband as their home, and that the criminal act, the unlawful' use of the premises, mas in the presence of her husband, [italics now supplied] and there' was no evidence offered tending to show that she acted upon her own initiative or that she acted freely and of her own volition, and there was no evidence offered to rebut the presumption that she acted under the coercion of her husband.

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Related

Gray v. State
1974 OK CR 186 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1974)
Emmons v. State
1955 OK CR 144 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK CR 43, 268 P.2d 913, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trapp-v-state-oklacrimapp-1954.