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State v. Nodine

Oregon Supreme Court
May 31, 1927
256 P. 387 (Or. 1927)

Summary

In State v. Nodine, 121 Or. 567, 256 P. 387 (1927), the court was dealing with the act which made it a crime to possess and a crime to sell liquor.

Summary of this case from State v. Winslow

Opinion

Argued April 19, 1927

Affirmed May 31, 1927

From Curry: JOHN C. KENDALL, Judge.

For appellant there was a brief over the names of Mr. John D. Goss, Mr. Herbert Murphy and Mr. M.W. Skipworth, with an oral argument by Mr. Goss.

For respondent there was a brief over the name of Mr. Collier H. Buffington.


On the fourteenth day of September, 1926, the appellant was tried and convicted in the Circuit Court for Curry County upon an indictment charging him with the crime of unlawfully possessing intoxicating liquor on the eleventh day of September, 1926. From a judgment and sentence based upon the conviction, he appeals. AFFIRMED.


It was brought out upon examination, during the trial, that the defendant had been arrested on or about the twelfth day of August, 1926, for selling intoxicating liquor to Ed Porterfield and John Cox, and it appeared upon the trial in that case that the liquor alleged to have been possessed and sold to Porterfield and Cox was the identical liquor for the possession of which the defendant was indicted in the present action. It is claimed here, and was so urged upon the trial, that the alleged conviction of the defendant on the charge of selling intoxicating liquor to Porterfield and Cox is a bar to the present action, although no former plea of former jeopardy or former conviction was entered. It is contended here that the statement, made by counsel upon and during the trial after several witnesses on behalf of the state had testified, amounts to a plea of former jeopardy.

The statute provides, among other things, that after defendant's right to move to set aside the indictment, and his demurrer, if any is offered, has been overruled, he may enter a plea of guilty or not guilty, or of former conviction or acquittal; and the statute provides the form in which such plea shall be entered in the journal. The form provided is as follows:

"The defendant pleads that he has already been convicted (or acquitted as the case may be) of the crime charged in this indictment, by the judgment of the court of ____ (naming it), rendered at ____ (naming the place), on the ____ day of ____, 19__."

The law requires the plea to be oral and entered on the journal substantially in the form above quoted.

The nearest that the defendant came to entering this plea is the statement of his counsel during the trial, which is as follows:

"I contend, so that it may appear of record, this is the first time we have been able to ascertain that this was the same facts upon which they base these offenses, and we will and do at this time, as soon as we are able to, enter a plea of former jeopardy on the facts, which would prevent a prosecution for this offense at this time."

The above statement seems to us to be far from the requirements of the Code in that it does not give the name of the court in which the former case was tried, the date of the trial, or indicate that any judgment was ever rendered by the justice before whom it was alleged to have been had. For this reason, we do not consider that any plea of former jeopardy, sufficient to meet the requirements, either of the statute or of common law, was made in this case, and if it were, upon the facts which cropped out in the course of the trial, we do not think it would be available. Defendant proceeds upon the theory that the possession of the liquor by the defendant was a constituent element in the sale of it to Porterfield and Cox, which is not necessarily the case. If the defendant had been in the possession of the liquor and had never sold it or delivered it to anybody, the complete crime of possession would have been committed. Subdivision 4 of Section 2224, Or. L., provides, among other things, the following:

"It shall be unlawful for any person to receive, import, possess, transport, deliver, manufacture, sell, give away or barter any intoxicating liquor within this state," etc.

All these provisions are not part of a single crime, but each expresses a distinct crime and, therefore, while selling is one crime, possession is another and a distinct crime, and is entirely complete in itself whether the liquor so possessed is sold or retained by the possessor. It is competent for a person by one act to commit two crimes: State v. Stewart, 11 Or. 52. In this case, while possession of the liquor might have been incident to the crime of selling it, it was not in itself a part of that offense and its being shown in the case was merely incidental to the main fact of the charge of selling. So, the contention of the counsel, while ingenious, must be repudiated. A more difficult question arises upon an effort by counsel to show that the parties, who, it is alleged, purchased this liquor of defendant, threatened a day or two before, on account of some ill feeling between them and defendant, to get the defendant and applied to a witness, whose testimony offered to prove such application, to inform them where they could get some liquor to the end that they could, in substance, frame up a charge against defendant. This testimony was rejected by the court. The general rule is that defendant's case cannot be bolstered up by showing that somebody else had threatened to commit the crime for which he is accused, because any attempt to go into that subject would practically be a trial of a person not before the court and would lead to an interminable discussion. That is to say, if A is accused of killing B, it is not competent to show that C, another party, had threatened to kill B. The position is established by a multitude of authorities. The case at bar is not altogether analogous, but the reasons for excluding such testimony are similar. Had Porterfield and Cox been witnesses in the case at bar, evidence of such declarations on their part would clearly have been admissible as an impeachment of the credibility of their testimony; but they were not witnesses and the evidence shows that they had absented themselves from the state for reasons not shown, but, possibly from fear of arrest and trial for their participation in the purchase of the liquor. The only case that bears favorably at all toward defendant's position is State v. Coss, 53 Or. 462 ( 101 P. 193), but that case is easily distinguishable from this. In that case the complaining witness in the prosecution of Coss for rape was asked if she had been conferred with by two other persons, one the divorced wife, and the other a brother of Coss, shown to be bitter enemies of defendant, and if this prosecution had been suggested by them, to which questions she answered in the negative. The fact of their enmity to the defendant and their intimacy with the prosecuting witness and expressed intention of seeing the defendant prosecuted was offered in evidence and was overruled by the Circuit Court. This action of the Circuit Court was held erroneous by the Supreme Court. That decision, while very close to the line, was no doubt correct under the circumstances, as it tended to throw some light upon what had influenced the prosecuting witness to make the charge and testify to it in court. But it is not contended in this case that any witness for the prosecution was in any way influenced by the alleged actions of Porterfield and Cox. It was simply introduced for the purpose of showing by such declarations whether it was probable that they had framed up a case against defendant, and, as said before, this testimony would have been admissible had they appeared as witnesses upon the trial. While the offer of their evidence presents an exceedingly plausible excuse for admitting it, consideration of the highest public policy indicates if a proceeding of this kind were introduced into the trial of criminal cases, such outside element would make many trials almost interminable and would be in fact an impeachment of persons not before the court either as witnesses or parties. These are the chief contentions in this case, and their solution against the contention of defendant renders an affirmation of the judgment of the lower court necessary, and it is so ordered.

AFFIRMED.

BURNETT, C.J., and RAND and COSHOW, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

State v. Nodine

Oregon Supreme Court
May 31, 1927
256 P. 387 (Or. 1927)

In State v. Nodine, 121 Or. 567, 256 P. 387 (1927), the court was dealing with the act which made it a crime to possess and a crime to sell liquor.

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

State v. Nodine

Case Details

Full title:STATE v. KAY NODINE

Court:Oregon Supreme Court

Date published: May 31, 1927

Citations

256 P. 387 (Or. 1927)
256 P. 387

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