United States v. One Buick Coach Automobile

34 F.2d 318, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1444
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedAugust 3, 1929
DocketNo. 323
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 318 (United States v. One Buick Coach Automobile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. One Buick Coach Automobile, 34 F.2d 318, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1444 (N.D. Ind. 1929).

Opinion

SLICK, District Judge.

The government, the plaintiff, brings a libel against a Buick coach automobile and certain quantities of liquor. The information is in two paragraphs. The first is brought under section 3450 and the second under section 3453 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (26 USOA §§ 1181,1182,1185).

The General Motors Acceptance Corporation filed a petition to intervene, which was granted. In its answer it sets up facts which show that it is the owner of the legal title to said Buick coach, it having purchased said title from the company which sold it to Russell Cowan, who was found in possession thereof. The facts are as follows:

On February 12th, Cowan sold a gallon of moonshine liquor to two prohibition agents, and at the time of this sale he informed the agents that he could furnish them with larger quantities of liquor on short notice. He was not arrested.' The next day the agents ordered by telephone 15 gallons of moonshine liquor, to he delivered at the same place the first sale was made on the previous day, which was in a washroom in the rear of an automobile garage. Within 15 minutes after [319]*319ordering the liquor on February 13th, the agents went to this washroom, where they found Cowan with the Buick coach in question and three five-gallon jugs of moonshine liquor, on which no tax, had been paid. Cowan was arrested without a capias or warrant, and the agents took possession of the automobile and the liquor. On March 16th Cowan, accompanied by his attorney, visited the District Attorney’s office and informed the assistant district attorney that he (Cow-an) was ready to plead guilty to a criminal information. The district attorney informed them that he would prepare such information at once, and did so. The information was in three counts, and charged respectively manufacture, sale, and transportation of liquor on or about February 12,1929. A plea of guilty was entered to this information, and the criminal ease was finally disposed of.

When Cowan pleaded guilty on March 16,1929, he believed, from information given him by his attorney, that he was pleading guilty to criminal offenses committed on both February 12th and 13th. As he put it, he thought he was cleaning the slate. He has never been proceeded against for any criminal offense' since his plea of guilty. Cowan did not know that any tax was due or could be paid the government on this illicitly distilled liquor, and had no intent to defraud the United States of a tax on the same. No liquor was found in the car seized, but the 15 gallons were found at a distance of 4 or 5 feet from the car, on the floor of the garage, and in the room where the car was located. The door of the ear next to the liquor was open, the rear cushion was out, the jugs of liquor were in gunny sacks, and bags of the same material were found in the car.

Cowan hauled the liquor in question to the washroom in the Buick automobile seized. He had been at the washroom with the ear and liquor 5 or 10 minutes before the prohibition agents arrived. There was one other automobile and some articles of furniture in the room at the time the arrest was made and the ear seized. Nothing in the room was seized, except the three jugs of whisky and the ear. After the telephone conversation, Cowan took the three jugs of liquor in the car in question to the washroom, where the agents discovered him immediately after he unloaded the liquor from the ear.

Intervening petitioner is the owner of the car seized, and had no knowledge whatever, or any cause to believe, that the ear was being used to transport or conceal liquor. The washroom and garage were owned and operated by persons not involved in this ease, and, so far as the evidence discloses, not associated with Cowan in the liquor business.

Was Proceeding under National Prohibition Act Mandatory?

The whole atmosphere of this ease forces the conclusion that the government is attempting to proceed under an old revenue statute for the very purpose of cutting off the rights of innocent lienholders. If proceedings had been instituted under the National Prohibition Act, these rights of-innocent lienholders could and would be protected. And why not? The National Prohibition Act (27 USCA § 40) specifically commands that “whenever intoxicating liquors transported or possessed illegally shall be seized by an officer he shall take possession of the vehicle * * * or automobile, * * * and shall arrest any person in charge thereof.” The act further provides that proceedings shall be begun at once under the provisions of the Prohibition Act.

It is urged that the evidence justifies the inference that Cowan was found in possession of illicit liquor, and that the automobile seized was intimately connected with this possession and custody. Granted. But what was this intimate connection ? • Cowan first denied ownership of the liquor and car, and then admitted ownership of both. He admitted bringing the liquor to the garage in the car; he was found standing within a few feet of the car, and between the ear and the liquor, under circumstances that convince an unprejudiced mind that the act of transporting the liquor to the garage in the car and of unloading the liquor were one and the same transaction, and his possession of the liquor was incidental to its transportation. In other words, he was caught,- discovered, in the very act of transferring the liquor from the car to the garage floor. The door of the car was open; the back cushion was removed; the covering on the containers corresponded with material found in the ear. What further proof could be required? And yet the court is asked to And that the liquor was not being transported or possessed illegally at the time of the seizure. If it was not being transported or possessed illegally, what was it seized for? The facts, while not identical with, are quite similar to, those in U. S. v. One Ford Coupé, 272 U. S. 321, 47 S. Ct. 154, 71 L. Ed. 279, 47 A. L. R. 1025. In that case the automobile in which the liquor was found was standing still when discovered, and in a very able dissenting opinion, written [320]*320by Mr. Justice Butler and concurred in by Justices MeReynolds and Sutherland, it is said “the facts stated make out transportation.”

So the facts in this case make out a case of transportation, and a denial of transportation by Cowan “would not be entitled to respectful attention.” In fact, Cowan admitted the transportation at the trial. He also stated that he had no intent to defraud the United States of any revenue tax. He did not know that any tax was due. This evidence is not controverted. If he did not know that a tax was due, how could he intend to defraud with reference thereto ? He did not transport, possess, or conceal with intent to defraud the United States of a tax, but with the intent to commit an offense against the National Prohibition Act, with which he was familiar. The argument that the agents did not see the automobile containing the liquor while it was in motion, and therefore did not ■discover the act of transportation, is extreme-1 ly technical.

“Discover,” according to Webster’s New International Dictionary, means to lay open to view; to reveal; to make known of, as of a thing existing already, but not perceived or known; to find out; to ascertain; to espy; to detect. Transportation was revealed to them when they found Cowan with the liquor and automobile under the circumstances heretofore described.

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34 F.2d 318, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-one-buick-coach-automobile-innd-1929.