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Town of Blacksburg v. Beam

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Mar 28, 1916
104 S.C. 146 (S.C. 1916)

Summary

In Town of Blacksburg v. Beam, 104 S.C. 146, the court said: "Some things are to be more deplored than the unlawful transportation of whisky.

Summary of this case from The People v. McGurn

Opinion

9354

March 28, 1916.

Before HON. CHAS. CARROLL SIMMS, special Judge, July, 1915. Affirmed.

Audie Beam was acquitted of the charge of transporting alcoholic liquors, and the Town of Blacksburg appeals.

Messrs. B.F. Ramsuer and Butler Hall, for appellant. The latter cite: As to merits: 100 S.C. 91; Const., art. I, secs. 13 and 16; Crim. Code, sec. 4; 72 S.C. 104, 109 and 110. As to right of town to appeal: 30 S.C. 399; 76 S.C. 39; 66 S.C. 398; 101 S.C. 267. Waiver of objection: 73 S.C. 291; 61 S.C. 141; 70 S.C. 466; 61 S.C. 237.

Mr. N.W. Hardin, for respondent, cites: Const., art. I, sec. 16; 116 U.S. 616; 232 U.S. 394; Crim. Code, secs. 824, 825; 96 S.C. 384; 55 S.C. 240; 19 S.C. 140; 54 S.C. 286. Evidence inadmissible: 98 S.C. 147; Crim. Code 102; Civ. Code 3008.


March 28, 1916. The opinion of the Court was delivered by


The defendant was tried by the mayor of Blacksburg for transporting alcoholic liquors, was found guilty, and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100, or to serve 30 days at hard labor on the public works. The Circuit Court in a formal order reversed the judgment and dismissed the case. The municipal corporation has appealed by seven exceptions, the first six of which refer back to the exceptions which the defendant had made to the mayor's judgment, and the seventh of which is general in character. The record is short, and we shall consider the issues which were argued, and which fairly arise on the record, and without much regard to formality.

The defendant is a young, white farmer, and lives near Kings Creek, a few miles out from Blacksburg. He had been to Union Courthouse, where he bought the whiskey from a dispensary; he put the liquor in his trunk, and checked the trunk to Blacksburg, where he disembarked from the railroad cars, bought a ticket to Kings Creek (towards York), and had his trunk rechecked to that place. Pending his passage from one line of railroad to another, the chief of police at Blacksburg, without any process, searched the defendant's person, got therefrom his trunk key, opened the trunk, and seized the whiskey, arrested and incarcerated defendant, and only the next morning thereafter procured to be issued a warrant of arrest. So that it so happened one town in the same Judicial Circuit sold the whiskey to the defendant for a profit, and another town took it from him by force, and flung him in jail for having it in his possession. We have no doubt but that a conviction under the recited circumstances is unlawful. Some things are to be more deplored than the unlawful transportation of whiskey; one is the loss of liberty. Common as the event may be, it is a serious thing to arrest a citizen, and it is a more serious thing to search his person; and he who accomplishes it, must do so in conformity to the laws of the land. There are two reason for this: one to avoid bloodshed, and the other to preserve the liberty of the citizen. Obedience to law is the bond of society, and the officers set to enforce the law are not exempt from its mandates.

In the instant case the possession of the liquor was the body of the offense; that fact was proven by a forcible and unlawful search of the defendant's person to secure the veritable key to the offense. It is fundamental that a citizen may not be arrested and have his person searched by force and without process in order to secure testimony against him. The act of 1908 (25 St. at Large, p. 1089) has no application to the case. There was no flight by the defendant, and, therefore, no pursuit by the officer, and that act gives no power to search the person. It is better that the guilty shall escape, rather than another offense shall be committed in the proof of guilt.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS. JUSTICES HYDRICK and WATTS concur in the opinion of the Court.


I dissent. I can see how an unlawful arrest can entitle a citizen to discharge from unlawful imprisonment, but not how it can entitle him to an acquittal of an offense which he committed. I do not see anything in the record to show that the keys were taken from the person of the defendant. The statement is:

"I arrested him last night, and found keys that belong to the trunk that had the whiskey in it."

There is no statement that the keys were found on, or taken from, the person of the defendant. I do not see anything in the record to show that the State sold the liquor to the defendant. The liquor had dispensary stamps on it. It may be only fair to allow a man who had bought liquor from the State to sell it again, even at a fair profit, but such is not the law. Further, at the time of his arrest, the defendant was engaged in procuring the transportation, by common carrier, of the liquor from a county having a dispensary into a county where there is no dispensary, in violation of section 852, Criminal Code 1912.


Summaries of

Town of Blacksburg v. Beam

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Mar 28, 1916
104 S.C. 146 (S.C. 1916)

In Town of Blacksburg v. Beam, 104 S.C. 146, the court said: "Some things are to be more deplored than the unlawful transportation of whisky.

Summary of this case from The People v. McGurn
Case details for

Town of Blacksburg v. Beam

Case Details

Full title:TOWN OF BLACKSBURG v. BEAM

Court:Supreme Court of South Carolina

Date published: Mar 28, 1916

Citations

104 S.C. 146 (S.C. 1916)
88 S.E. 441

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