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Goss v. State

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Jan 8, 1940
192 So. 494 (Miss. 1940)

Summary

In Goss v. State, 187 Miss. 188, 192 So. 494, intoxicating liquor was found in the home of the defendant, apparently in a space under a trap door which was under the cooking stove.

Summary of this case from Peeples v. State

Opinion

No. 33738.

December 11, 1939. Suggestion of Error Overruled January 8, 1940.

1. SEARCHES AND SEIZURES.

To justify a search without a search warrant, the information must be sufficient to satisfy the judicial mind that there is probable cause, but where search warrant is obtained, probability or probable cause is judicially ascertained by the officer issuing the warrant.

2. SEARCHES AND SEIZURES.

If affidavit for search warrant is sufficient on its face, it will be presumed that officer issuing the warrant inquired into the facts, and as between accused and the state, sufficiency of the facts cannot be questioned in prosecution based on evidence obtained by the search.

3. SEARCHES AND SEIZURES.

Adjudication by a justice of the peace that there is probable cause for issuance of search warrant is sufficient, and judicially establishes the fact that there is probable cause.

4. INTOXICATING LIQUORS.

Where justice of the peace issued search warrant upon county officer's affidavit that he believed that intoxicating liquors were being illegally kept and sold upon defendant's premises, and officer making affidavit got his information from defendant's half-brother, whom he regarded as a credible person, evidence thus obtained was admissible.

5. INTOXICATING LIQUORS.

Evidence of circumstances under which liquor was found in defendant's kitchen under a "false door bottom" held to authorize conviction of unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor.

APPEAL from circuit court of Attala county; HON. JNO F. ALLEN, J.

D.H. Glass and G.S. Landrum, both of Kosciusko, for appellant.

It was the contention of appellant, in the lower court, and is still his contention that the state did not make out a case against him on competent evidence. In other words, the evidence obtained was secured in an unlawful manner; that the information acted on by the deputy sheriff was not the kind of information that would warrant this officer in making the affidavit for a search warrant.

McGowan v. State, 185 So. 826.

Appellant respectfully submits that the law was not complied with in proving the credibility of statements made by Woodrow Peavy. The deputy sheriff did not know his reputation, and as stated in McGowan case, some officers are very easily led to believe any statement. The proof presented by the state did not comply with the rule laid down in the McGowan case, and the court erred in refusing the motion for a peremptory instruction and the court also erred in overruling the objections made by appellant as to the admissibility of the evidence as to what was found in the way of intoxicating liquors in the home of the appellant.

W.D. Conn, Jr., Assistant Attorney-General, for the State.

This case raises precisely the same question as was raised in the case of Velma Goss v. State, 192 So. 447. A search warrant was issued on an affidavit therefor. Upon the search liquor was found. At the trial defendant undertook to go behind the affidavit to determine the character of information upon which the officer acted in making his affidavit for a search warrant. We think this was wholly unwarranted under the decisions of this court in Mai v. State, 152 Miss. 225, 119 So. 177; Sykes v. State, 157 Miss. 600, 128 So. 752; Castellucio v. State, 165 Miss. 516, 146 So. 599.

The McGowan case, 185 So. 826, is no authority for appellant's position. That was a case where an automobile was searched without a search warrant, but upon an asserted existence of probable cause. We do not think that the decision in the McGowan case in any manner modifies or qualifies the rule laid down and enforced in the three cases above cited.

Argued orally by Scott Landrum, for appellant, and by W.D. Conn, Jr., for the State.


Velma Goss was convicted of the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquors, and sentenced to pay a fine of $250 and serve thirty days in the county jail; from which conviction this appeal is prosecuted.

A large part of the evidence was obtained by a search warrant which was issued by a justice of the peace of the county, upon an affidavit made by a county officer, known to be a credible person, who said on oath that he had reason to believe and did believe that intoxicating liquors were being: "(1) Stored, kept, owned, controlled for purposes of sale in violation of law, (2) Sold or offered for sale in violation of law, . . . (4) Attempted to be manufactured or distilled in violation of law, (struck out) (5) Attempted to be transported in violation of law, in the residence, outhouse, barn, stalls, smokehouses, crib, and in the field, yard and garden and wood near the residence of V.G. Goss in the 1st district of said Attala County, Mississippi, and on Section 29, Township 14, Range 7 in said Attala County, Mississippi, and more particularly described as follows: . . . (Description of the premises set forth)." Return on the warrant was made, as follows: "I have executed the within writ personally by delivering a true copy of this writ to V.G. Goss and searching his premises and finding whiskey in his possession and under his control and further executed by arresting the within named V.G. Goss, and releasing him under his own recognizance".

The officers testified to the search and finding of the liquor, and the appellant was indicated by the grand jury. The appellant introduced one Riley Summers, who testified before the jury tending to show that the liquor belonged to someone else, or was brought to the premises of the appellant by one Woodrow Peavey who "come out there, got out of the car and come in and had something around a half a case of liquor, some in a paper bag and some on him, and he gave me three or four drinks and said he had to hide it and went out into the kitchen, I don't know where he put it — didn't know where he put it at the time, and the next morning, and the next morning he come by there and told me to put this whiskey under the stove, and Velma had brought his wife home and he didn't know how to get it out without them knowing about it, and I started to tell Velma about it and met my wife's brother and he said that the Sheriff had got it". His brother testified that Gwin Powell was with Peavey and at that time Mrs. Goss and Velma Goss were not present. Velma Goss testified in his own behalf that the liquor found by the search under the stove in his home was not his liquor; that he did not know the liquor was there; and that when the search was made that he, is wife and his wife's mother was at home, also, that a preacher was there.

A principal assignment of error here is that the officer making the affidavit for the search warrant did not have sufficient knowledge to constitute probable cause. This witness testified that he got his information from a named party, who is a half-brother of the appellant, and that he believed the statement made to him by this party as he regarded him as a credible person. The appellant invokes McGowan v. State, Miss., 185 So. 826, but this case is inapplicable here. In that case, the search was made without a search warrant, and in such a case, to justify the search, the information must be sufficient to satisfy the judicial mind that there is probable cause, etc.; but, where a search warrant is obtained, probability, or probable cause is judicially ascertained by the officer issuing the search warrant, and if an affidavit contains matters of fact sufficient on its face, it will be presumed that the officer inquired into the facts before the issuance of the search warrant; and between the person accused, and the State, the sufficiency of the facts cannot be inquired into on a prosecution based on evidence obtained by the search. Adjudication by a justice of the peace that there is probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant is sufficient, and judicially establishes the fact that there is such probable cause. See Castellucio v. State, 165 Miss. 516, 146 So. 599; and Mai v. State, 152 Miss. 225, 119 So. 177. The McGowan case, supra, does not modify the rule announced in these last cited cases.

The facts produced in evidence were sufficient to sustain a conviction. Under all of the facts, as shown in the record, the jury were not compelled to accept the evidence of the witnesses for the defendant. The liquor was found in the kitchen of his home under a "false floor bottom" which was under the cooking stove, apparently a trap-door especially constructed for the concealment of things; and the jury were entitled to believe the appellant knew the liquor was there and that it belonged to him.

Judgment of conviction is affirmed.


Summaries of

Goss v. State

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Jan 8, 1940
192 So. 494 (Miss. 1940)

In Goss v. State, 187 Miss. 188, 192 So. 494, intoxicating liquor was found in the home of the defendant, apparently in a space under a trap door which was under the cooking stove.

Summary of this case from Peeples v. State
Case details for

Goss v. State

Case Details

Full title:GOSS v. STATE

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B

Date published: Jan 8, 1940

Citations

192 So. 494 (Miss. 1940)
192 So. 494

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