Whitaker v. Commonwealth

246 S.W. 825, 197 Ky. 283, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 625
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 16, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 825 (Whitaker v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Commonwealth, 246 S.W. 825, 197 Ky. 283, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 625 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The appellant, Willie Whitaker, was arrested by virtue of a warrant issued by the county judge of Floyd county charging him with the offense of selling spirituous liquor, not for sacramental, medicinal, scientific or mechanical purposes. On his trial for the offense in the court of the county judge, he was found guilty by verdict of a jury and his punishment fixed at a fine of $300.00 and confinement of 60 days in jail. He appealed from the judgment on that verdict to the Floyd circuit court and his trial in the latter court resulted in a verdict of the [284]*284jury again finding him guilty, and inflicting the same punishment awarded on the previous trial; and from the judgment entered on ;the last verdict he has appealed to this court.

We find from the testimony of Sam England, the Commonwealth’s chief witness, that at six o’clock A. M. July 29, 1922, the appellant and one Jim Sheppard came to his residence on Stephens branch in Floyd county and Sheppard, in the immediate presence of appellant, at once proposed to sell him (England) some whiskey which lie and the appellant did not have with them, but would conduct him to for the purpose of effecting its proposed sale to England. When asked by the latter the price he put upon the whiskey, Sheppard said he would want $10.00 per gallon for it. 'Thereupon England and Nelse líale, who about that time arrived at England’s home, started with Sheppard and appellant for the place where the former said the whiskey was located, and under the guidance of Sheppard and appellant were led by them to a point on Canady branch, -near the residence of appellant’s brother-in-law, and then to the side of a nearby hill where the whiskey was concealed. England purchased two gallons and three quarts of the whiskey at the agreed total price of $27.50, which he then paid by handing Sheppard $7.50 in money and giving his check for the remaining $20.00, which, by direction of Sheppard, he made payable to the appellant. After paying for and receiving' the whiskey England, assisted by Hale in carrying it, left afoot with it for his home, but upon getting about 200 yards from where it was obtained he and Hale were met by Clark, a peace officer, who discovering their possession of the whiskey, placed them under arrest; and acting upon their information of its. purchase from Sheppard and appellant, proceeded at once to where the latter were still in view and also arrested them.

When arrested appellant and Sheppard were upon their horses, as if preparing to leave, and each of them in possession of a pair of saddle pockets. The appellant’s residence is in Magoffin county and when arrested he was twelve miles from his home. Sheppard’s place of residence is not shown by the evidence. England’s testimony is substantially corroborated by that of Hale, though the latter was evidently reluctant to testify against the appellant; and, also, by that of Clark from the timé he appeared on the scene of action. Although it was not expressly so stated by either England or Hale it is fairly [285]*285apparent from the statement-of each of them that they were sharers in the purchase of the whiskey, -but in what -proportion the evidence does not disclose.

It is urged by the appellant as grounds for the reversal. of the judgment appealed from, that the trial court erred to the prejudice of his substantial rights, first, in admitting, over his objection, incompetent evidence; second, in refusing, on the appellant’s motion made at the conclusion of the evidence, to direct the jury by an instruction to that effect, to return in his behalf a verdict of “not guilty.”

The evidence claimed by the appellant to be incompetent consisted of a statement of the officer, Clark, to the effect that he made, without a search warrant, some sort of search of the persons of England and Hale upon meeting them following their purchase of the whiskey appellant was charged with selling. Neither England nor Hale testified that they were searched by 'Clark and the testimony of Clark was quite indefinite in reg-ard to the nature and extent of such search, but reasonably definite as to the fact that it was not made until after his discovery of the whiskey which England and Hale were carrying exposed to view, and also after his arrest of them for having the exposed whiskey in their possession. It seems clear, therefore, that whatever search was made by Clark must have been of the clothing of England and Hale to ascertain whether they had, in addition to the whiskey exposed to view, any concealed about their persons. In such state of case the officer’s possession of a search warrant was unnecessary. We, however, fail to see how such search of England and Hale, if made as claimed by appellant, can be complained of by him. The right to demand immunity from search at the hands of the officer, in the absence of his possession of a search warrant authorizing it, was one personal to .them and which they alone could exercise; and the fact that evidence obtained by an illegal search to which they were subjected would, if objected to, have been incompetent as against them in a prosecution for having the whiskey in their possession, would not render it incompetent as to the appellant, charged with the offense of its sale to them, as he had no legal right to object to a search of their persons or property, without a search warrant.

The trial court did not, therefore, érr in permitting Clark to testify in regard-to his discovery of the whiskey in the possession of England and Hale, or the manner [286]*286of his making the discovery, though it may have been, effected in part, or altogether, without a search warrant. Occurring as it did immediately after the purchase of the whiskey by England and Hale and in view of the appellant and Sheppard from whom they testified they had just procured it, the discovery of the whiskey in their possession by Clark, the manner of its discovery, its seizure and their arrest, were all competent as evidence tending to corroborate the testimony of England and Hale as to when, where and from whom they had purchased the whiskey.

No reason is apparent for sustaining the appellant’s further contention that the insufficiency of the evidence entitled him to a directed verdict of' acquittal. Considered as a whole, the evidence of the Commonwealth,, which was 'all that was introduced and wholly uncontradicted, shows that while the appellant’s companion, Sheppard, acted as spokesman in negotiating the sale of the whiskey to England and was the active agent in delivering it to him and Hale and receiving the money for its sale, the appellant was enough interested in what Sheppard was doing to leave his home in another county twelve miles distant and go with him to the home of England, where they arrived at the unseasonable hour of six o ’clock in the morning.

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Related

State v. Dunn
258 P. 553 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 825, 197 Ky. 283, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1923.