Court Opinion

ID: 3233422
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:08:32.377169+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:18.778312
License: Public Domain

Appellant was convicted of the offense of violating the Prohibition Laws by having whisky in his possession.
The identical question raised by defendant's plea in abatement is decided adversely to him in Dabbs v. State,104 So. 684, 20 Ala. App. 638.
In order to sustain a plea of former jeopardy against appropriate demurrer, it must appear with certainty that the offense for which the defendant was first tried was identical, to a common intent, with the charge in the second indictment, and that there was a verdict of a jury, or an unauthorized withdrawal of the case from the jury, and it would appear essential that the record of the first indictment or charge should be set out in full. Defendant's second plea did not measure up to this test, and the state's demurrer thereto was properly sustained. Henry v. State, 33 Ala. 389; Mitchell v. State, 80 So. 730, 16 Ala. App. 635.
Appellant lived in a house on a road some 150 feet in front of a small lake. In this lake, buried in the muck of an island therein, the state's witnesses, officers of the law, found some jugs of whisky, and on the island some empty containers which had previously contained whisky On the back porch of appellant's house they found a pair of "hip" or "wading" boots on which there was mud or muck of the sort found in the lake. About the appellant's premises they found a quantity of empty bottles and jugs. These officers testified that the water of the lake averaged 20 feet across, that the lake was a part of appellant's backyard, and under the same fence. Some objections were interposed to questions eliciting this evidence, but they were general objections and, the testimony called for being legal and competent, *Page 325 
were properly overruled. Hall v. State, 96 So. 644, 19 Ala. App. 229. Appellant denied ownership of the boots; denied that the lake was within his fence, or on his premises; and denied any knowledge of, or control over, the whisky.
The sole issuable fact was the possession of the liquor. The adversary evidence was in sharp conflict, making a question for the jury. There was hence no error in refusing the affirmative instruction requested by the appellant.
Other refused charges are so patently bad as to require no separate treatment. The same is true of the exception to a part of the court's oral charge. Taken as a whole, as it must be, the said oral charge fully, fairly, and explicitly instructed upon every phase of the case.
We find nowhere any prejudicial error, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.