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State v. Jones

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Apr 1, 1918
95 S.E. 576 (N.C. 1918)

Summary

In S. v. Jones, 175 N.C. 709, Walker, J., for the Court, held that one was guilty of manufacturing if he furnished the still, or the corn, or the coal and wood to make the fire, or any other material used in the manufacture of liquor.

Summary of this case from State v. Brown

Opinion

(Filed 10 April, 1918.)

1. Spirituous Liquors — Illegal Manufacture — Evidence — Trials — Questions for Jury.

The evidence in this case that the component parts to make a complete still was found on defendant's premises, over his kitchen, with material in the progress of distilling, the odor of the liquor, etc., is held sufficient for conviction of the manufacture of liquor contrary to the statute.

2. Spirituous Liquors — Use of Premises — Consent — Trials — Instructions.

One who permits his premises to be used for the unlawful purpose of manufacturing spirituous liquor is a participant in the crime and as guilty of the offense as those who actually manufacture it; and where there is evidence that a still had been found on the defendant's premises, in a room over his kitchen, where spirituous liquor had been manufactured, a charge by the court that he would be guilty if he took part in the offense by giving permission that his premises be thus used, is not erroneous.

3. Evidence — Photographs — Explanatory.

Where there is evidence of the accuracy of a photograph, a witness may us it for the restricted purpose of illustrating his testimony to the jury, relevant to the injury.

INDICTMENT tried before Shaw, J., at February Term 1918 of SURRY.

Attorney-General Manning and Assistant Attorney-General Sykes for the State.

Folger, Jackson Folger for defendant.


CLARK, C. J., concurring with opinion.


The defendant was charged with the manufacture of liquor contrary to the statute. As there was a motion to nonsuit, it will be necessary to state some of the evidence.

U. G. Belton testified: "In consequence of information received by me, I went with E. G. Smith, revenue officer, and two policemen of the town of Mount Airy, to the home of the defendant Sampson Jones: we went into the smokehouse, a few feet in the rear of the dwelling, and there found a 50-gallon barrel about two-thirds full of still beer, two 25-gallon tubs, which apparently had had still beer in them, and something like a peck of rye malt; just outside the smokehouse door was a 50-gallon barrel about two-thirds full of sweet cider. We also found a five-gallon keg on the back porch which smelt like corn whiskey and which apparently had been recently emptied; perhaps a little of the whiskey remaining in the bottom of the keg. I was not in the house when the can and coffee pot and things were found upstairs, having gone out down the branch, away from the house, searching, but found nothing down there. When I came back these things had been found. I went in the room, saw the furnace of rock and mud, about four or five feet long and about 18 inches high, built on the floor; saw the dead coals and ashes, apparently fresh ashes, and the oil can, coffee pot, still-worm, and keg. The keg containing the (710) still-worm was sitting near the furnace, the worm being attached to the keg and the lower end of the still-worm extending out through a hole near the bottom of the keg. There was also a brass faucet in the lower part of the keg, apparently for draining the keg. I do not remember whether there was any water in the keg when I got there or not. The still-worm was several feet long in a coil and is what I call a fine worm. The oil can held about five gallons; the opening at the top was enlarged and had a collar about it; the coffee pot, which held about three quarts, had been split up about the spout and lapped over so that it fitted the opening in this still. I was four years a brandy gauger and visited, on an average, fifty or more brandy distilleries a year. I have also seen in operation a great many whiskey distilleries and know the outfit and ingredients necessary for the making of whiskey and brandy. Still beer is the fermented meal or malt out of which whiskey is made by distillation; low wine is a whiskey, less than proof, which runs out through a worm at the end of the `doubling,' and which in the ordinary process is poured into the next `run' to make it proof liquor. The necessary outfit for making whiskey is a still, a still cap, a still-worm, and a cooling tub. The paraphernalia found at Sampson Jones', when connected up, made a complete distillery outfit to manufacture either whiskey or brandy, and I should say that the outfit there found would make from five to seven gallons of liquor in a day."

M. F. Patterson testified: "I was at J. P. Jones' with Sheriff Belton, Deputy Sheriff Davis, and Policeman Monday and Revenue Officer E. G. Smith; we went there in the afternoon, some time prior to October Term of court; we found in the smokehouse, a few yards in the rear of the dwelling, a barrel about three-fourths full of still beer, and two empty 25-gallon receptacles which appeared to have had still beer in them, and some rye malt; just outside the smokehouse we found a 50-gallon barrel, about three-fourths full of sweet cider. While the others were making the search about the premises, E. G. Smith and myself went in the dwelling-house, which was open, and searched the rooms downstairs and found nothing, except the ordinary furnishings. We went upstairs, accompanied by a son of J. P. Jones, a boy of about fourteen or fifteen years of age, and searched the two front rooms and found, behind a trunk, two quarts in bottles of low wine; when we came to the door of the room over the kitchen it was locked, and we asked the boy to let us into this room, but he hesitated and said he would rather not go in there until his father came, and that he was on the upper place, about a mile in Virginia. He then took the key, which was hanging somewhere about the door, and unlocked it. We found in this room over the kitchen a furnace of rock and mud, or mortar, built on the floor near the chimney, about four or five feet long, and from fourteen to eighteen inches high; by the side of the furnace was a wooden keg with a still-worm (711) in it, and there was also on the floor a tin can holding about four gallons, which looked like an oil can, and a coffee pot with a copper arm or spout about 18 inches long. We took the five-gallon can and set it on top of the furnace and it fitted exactly into the opening surrounded by a rim of mortar; the bottom of the can was black and the sides of it were smoked black, and there was what appeared to be baked meal around the top of the can. The opening in the top of the five-gallon can was not so large as the opening at the top of the coffee pot, about three-quart coffee pot; the upper part of the coffee pot had been split and lapped over, so lapped that it fitted exactly into the top of the can; the end of the arm or spout extending from the coffee pot fitted exactly into the still-worm in the tub or keg. They were not connected, however, but lying in different parts of the room. The defendant Jones was not at home; his son was there clerking in the store. He went in the house with us and told us his father was at work on the farm. The house had three rooms upstairs and three rooms down stairs. There were cans packed in the room over the kitchen in which we found the furnace and other articles of furniture. We found two bottles of backings or wines in a bedroom behind a trunk, not the room in which we found the furnace and other articles mentioned. Jones lives on the sand-clay road about four miles from Mount Airy, in a thickly populated neighborhood."

There was other testimony of a like kind.

The defendant was convicted and appealed from the judgment of the court.


after stating the case: There was ample evidence to support the verdict, and the motion to nonsuit was properly overruled. The evidence tended to show that defendant had been engaged in the business of manufacturing liquor. He had on his premises and in his residence all the component parts of a perfect apparatus for distilling liquor, and if others assisted in the process of manufacturing, there was also evidence that the defendant not only permitted the illegal business to be done in his house, but actually furnished the still and the place for using it, and this would make him a participant in the crime.

The charge of the court that if the defendant took part in the offense by giving his permission to the use of his premises for the illegal purpose, he would be guilty, is clearly sustained by the case of S. v. Denton, 154 N.C. 641, where this Court held, as shown by the (712) headnotes, as follows: "1. If the jury should be satisfied from the evidence that H. owned the whiskey and brought it in a basket to defendant's home for the purpose of selling it there, and sold a pint to one D. in defendant's presence and with his knowledge, the defendant would be guilty of aiding and abetting the sale; and that is in misdemeanors all aiders and abettors are principals, defendant would be guilty as a principal in the unlawful sale. 2. One is guilty of an unlawful sale of spirituous liquor as a principal when he allows the use of his home in order to more secretly effect the sale there; and evidence tending to show that this was done and the price paid while at defendant's home in a room wherein he was lying on a lounge, though without evidence of his receiving a part of the price paid, is sufficient for his conviction as a principal in aiding and abetting the unlawful act," citing Commonwealth v. Hayes, 167 Mass. 176, as deciding that one may be convicted for the unlawful sale of or keeping for sale of, intoxicating liquors, if the jury find "that the premises were kept and maintained by him, and that any part thereof was, with defendant's consent, used for the illegal sale or keeping of spirituous liquors."

And this Court added in S. v. Denton, supra: "If the defendant knowingly permitted Hodge to use his home for the illicit sale of whiskey on one occasion, he is an aider and abettor on that occasion; and it is as much a violation of law as if he habitually permitted it."

That case was decided by a divided Court (two of the justices dissenting), but, even under the view held by the dissenting justices, the charge here could be sustained. This case is much stronger to show defendant's actual participation, as an aider and abettor, than the Denton case, for under the instruction of the Court the jury must have found that defendant did more than assent tacitly to the manufacture of liquor, and that he "aided and assisted" by contributing the use of his premises to the unlawful purpose. He is just as guilty, under the statute (Public Laws of 1917, ch. 157), as if he had furnished the still or the corn and apples, or the coal and wood to make the fire, or any other material used in the manufacture of the liquor.

The mere knowledge of the use of premises by a distiller and consent thereto of one who holds a mortgage on the same is made a ground of forfeiture by him of his interest under the act of Congress. U.S. v. Stowell, 133 U.S. 1; Glenn v. Winstead, 116 N.C. 454.

The exceptions as to the use of the photograph for the purpose of allowing one of the witnesses to illustrate or explain his testimony is not well taken. The witness was endeavoring to show how the parts of the distillery which were found in the house might be assembled so as to make a complete apparatus for manufacturing liquor. He could use a diagram for the purpose, and why not a photograph? The trial judge excluded it for any other purpose, and (713) distinctly charged the jury to disregard it, except for the indicated purpose and not to use it as substantive testimony. The witness M. F. Patterson testified that "it was a correct picture of the implements found in the defendant's house."

Photographs have been admitted in evidence with the sanction of the courts in similar cases. Butler v. State, 142 Ga. 286; Wade v. R. R., 89 S.C. 280; Griffith v. Coal Co., 84 S.E. 621; Spencer v. Looney, 116 Va. 767; Prok v. R. R., 75 W. Va. 697; Napier v. Little, 38 L.R.A. (N.S.), 91 (Anno. Cases, 1913 A, 1013); Shaw v. State, 83 Ga. 92; and in S. v. O'Reilly, 126 Mo. 597, where it is said: "It has always been permissible to use diagrams in the trial of causes, both civil and criminal, and especially in the latter class to use diagrams, if shown to be correct, to illustrate the position of persons and places and to better enable the witnesses to properly locate them. If, then, a diagram may be used for such a purpose, we can see no good reason why a photograph may not be, by which is presented to view everything within the range of the camera at the time the photograph was taken."

We have permitted photographs to be used, instead of diagrams, under circumstances making the latter competent, when they were shown to have been correctly taken. Hampton v. R. R., 120 N.C. 534; Davis v. R. R., 136 N.C. 116; Pickett v. R. R., 153 N.C. 148; Hoyle v. Hickory, 167 N.C. 619. As we said in the Hickory case, it might be impossible to illustrate the situation, or to give the jury a correct idea of it in any other way. If the correctness of the picture is shown, we do not see why it should be less competent than a diagram, or a drawing made by the witness for purposes of illustration at the time he testified.

No error.


Summaries of

State v. Jones

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Apr 1, 1918
95 S.E. 576 (N.C. 1918)

In S. v. Jones, 175 N.C. 709, Walker, J., for the Court, held that one was guilty of manufacturing if he furnished the still, or the corn, or the coal and wood to make the fire, or any other material used in the manufacture of liquor.

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

State v. Jones

Case Details

Full title:STATE v. J. P. JONES

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Apr 1, 1918

Citations

95 S.E. 576 (N.C. 1918)
175 N.C. 709

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