Court Opinion

ID: 6690976
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:37:48.086411+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:06.533193
License: Public Domain

POLLEY, J.
Appellant was tried for violating the provisions of § 10278, Code 1919. The evidence shows that appellant was keeping a pool hall; that on the 31st day of July, 1921, officers of the law went to- his place of business and made a search for intoxicating liquor; that concealed in a room to the rear of the pool room they found a bottle of intoxicating liquor.
At the trial appellant offered to show that he did not place the liquor where it was found and that he had no' knowledge that *577it' was there'. He offered to show further that he had been absent ¡from the state for three days next prior to the finding of the liquor; that during his absence his business had been attended to by another party. The court refused to admit any of, this proof, and in so doing we think the court erred to defendant’s prejudice. If the defendant did not place the liquor where it was found, and did not know it was there, and w'as not responsible’ for its being there, then he was not keeping it within the provisions of §. 10278, C. .19x9. Whether defendant placed the liquor where it was found, or whether he knew it was there, are questions of fact that should have been submitted to- the jury. It was immaterial where the defendant had been during the three days prior to the-finding of the intoxicating liquor on his premises, except so far as this fact may throw light on the question of his guilty knowledge. In State v. Ryan (S. D.) 200 N. W. 1018, just decided, we held that similar circumstances were relevant and material to the question of whether the defendant was guilty of having liquor in his possession in a public place.
The judgment and order appealed -from are reversed.