Court Opinion

ID: 7812260
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 17:14:09.663588+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:30.430021
License: Public Domain

Wood, J. This is an appeal from a judgment sentencing the appellant to imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for one year. The appellant was tried and convicted on an indictment which, in proper form, charged him with the crime of selling intoxicating liquors. B. T. Murphy testified that in the latter part of the year 1922 he was engaged in the mercantile business at DeQueen, Sevier County, Arkansas. Pie bought a gallon of whiskey from the appellant. He paid him in cash the sum of $2 and traded him merchandise in the sum of $4. Witness asked appellant if he could find him any whiskey to bring him a gallon; that his wife was sick_ and he needed it. Appellant said he didn’t have any, but thought lie could get some. Witness afterwards found the whiskey back in the store in a box; didn’t know how it got there. Appellant told witness it cost $6, and witness paid him that amount, as stated above, in money and merchandise. The appellant testified that Murphy asked him to get some whiskey for his wife, and he told Murphy that he would look around and see if he could get it. Ón the Saturday 'before appellant was arrested he was in a wagon-yard in DeQueen and there he met a man from Oklahoma by the name of M elver. He vspoke of having some whiskey. Appellant handed him $6 and asked him (o deliver the whisker to Murphy. Appellant afterwards asked Murphy if he had received it, and Murphy replied that lie liad not. Witness told Murphy tliat be bad sent a gallon up there and supposed it was in the hack of the store. They went back and found it there in a box. Murphy paid appellant $2 and appellant took the balance of $4 in trade in the store. Appellant didn’t make any profit in the transaction. The court instructed the jury, among other things, that if they believed from the evidence that the appellant was not interested in the sale of the liquor, but that he was acting merely as the agent of Murphy, the purchaser, he would not be guilty, and that, if they should so find, they should acquit lrim. The instruction of the court was more favorable to the appellant than he was entitled to, under the testimony. Bobo v. State, 105 Ark. 462; Williams v. State, 129 Ark. 344; Bryant v. State, 156 Ark. 580. There was no prejudicial error in the instructions, and there was testimony to sustain the verdict. The judgment is therefore correct, and it is affirmed.