Court Opinion

ID: 3946445
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:09:14.240411+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:40:44.474125
License: Public Domain

Appellant was convicted in the Criminal District Court of Williamson County of keeping his premises as a place to manufacture liquor, and his punishment fixed at three years in the penitentiary.
The record is before us without a single bill of exceptions, and it is only contended on behalf of appellant that the evidence does not support the conviction. The case was presented to the jury upon a charge containing the law applicable, which was so satisfactory to the accused as that he reserved no exception thereto. From the evidence it appears that on a certain day a party, including some officers, went to the premises rented and occupied by appellant and in a little outhouse or shed some twenty or thirty steps from the main dwelling house there was found a gas or oil stove burning and on the same were two stills the contents of which were at about the boiling point. Attached to the boilers was a coil and in the room were quantities of mash. The coil ran through a keg of water and the entire apparatus was testified as being capable of manufacturing liquor. The appellant was present on the occasion of the visit of said party and offers the testimony of no one who lived in his house or with him in anywise rebutting the presumption of his possession of the premises, of the mash, the stills and the other apparatus usable for the manufacture of liquor. Appellant introduced two witnesses, both of whom seem to have lived at Taylor some six or seven miles from appellant's place of residence. One of them was the mail carrier over that route by whom the defense sought to show that one Baker lived near the home of appellant about the time of the raid by the party above mentioned. The other witness was the constable at Taylor who went with said party. This witness testified that when they reached the premises appellant was at home, and that he, witness, was with the State witnesses when they discovered the two stills mentioned above and that both the stills were connected up and he thought the coil was in a tub of water and that the fire was burning. This witness testified that appellant, his wife and some children and appellant's brother-in-law were about the premises. According to this witness and that of the other witnesses there was no furniture of any kind in the little house where they found the still except the apparatus useful in the manufacture of liquor. The last witness mentioned for the defense also testified that the mash he found in the little house *Page 362 
referred to looked like other mash that he had seen in other stills that whisky was made from; that it was ordinary mash and that in his judgment whisky could be made out of the mash, and that the odor around the place was an odor similar to that noticed by him.
This being the only question raised, an affirmance will be ordered. around other stills. We regret our inability to agree with learned counsel for appellant that the evidence is insufficient.
Affirmed.
                          ON REHEARING.                        January 16, 1924.