Court Opinion

ID: 3642512
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 05:59:41.722929+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:39:57.350280
License: Public Domain

The defendant is indicted under the Code, sec.       (681) 2740, for giving away intoxicating liquor within five miles of a polling place at a time within twelve hours next preceding and succeeding a municipal election. The indictment is in due form and avoids the objections which were sustained in S. v. Stamey, 71 N.C. 202. There was direct evidence that the defendant gave some whiskey to one Roney, and within the time and place as charged. The court, therefore, properly refused the prayer to instruct the jury that the evidence was not sufficient to convict. The defendant testified that he found the bottle of whiskey; that he had not put it there, nor knew who did, but drank some of it; that he refused to give any of it to Roney, but told him he could get it the same way he did. The court charged the jury that "if they believed defendant's statement he would not be guilty. But that if they found as a fact from the evidence that Gibson put the liquor there, or knew of its being there, and gave any of the liquor to the witness *Page 502 
Roney, he would be guilty; or, if they found as a fact that Gibson found the liquor there, and if he passed the bottle containing liquor to the witness Roney, and Roney drank it, he would be guilty." To this the defendant excepted, but we find no error that he can complain of. S. v.McMinn, 83 N.C. 668. It is immaterial how the defendant acquired possession of the liquor, whether by previous arrangement or by chance finding it. The material point is whether he gave it away to Roney within the time and limits specified in the indictment, and that was properly left to the jury. The statute does not require that the selling or giving away liquor shall be with intent to influence any voter, or with any intent.
No error.
Cited: S. v. Piner, 141 N.C. 763; S. v. Tisdale, 145 N.C. 424.
(682)