Court Opinion

ID: 3966251
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:25:49.19006+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:36:14.803672
License: Public Domain

Appellant asks a rehearing asserting that the testimony was not sufficient to show that the liquor claimed to have been transported by him, was intoxicating. He insists that the witnesses can not taste liquor and then give testimony of sufficient incriminating force, to the intoxicating quality thereof. Referring to the statement of facts we observe that Mr. Covey testified that he had had experience in drinking and using intoxicating liquor. We quote from his testimony:
"From my experience in drinking and using intoxicating liquor and observing the effects of it upon other people, I think I am able to examine liquor by smelling it and tasting it and determine whether it is intoxicating."
Upon redirect examination, after being questioned by appellant's counsel as to his ability to determine from examination the intoxicating quality of liquor, this witness testified as follows:
"I have seen a little better grades of corn whisky, but judging from the taste and smell it is like all the rest of it that I ever saw and tastes like it. From my experience in handling and drinking and observing the influence of intoxicating liquor, in my opinion, the contents of that jug would be intoxicating beyond a doubt."
Being again cross-examined this witness stated:
"I can tell it would be intoxicating because I have had enough of it to know that a glassful would make me feel it right quick."
Another witness for the State testified that he had had experience in handling and using intoxicating liquors; that he sold it for twenty-five years and had felt the effects from drinking it and had observed the influence of it upon others. This witness said that he could taste liquor and tell whether or not it would make him drunk. We take the following from the testimony of said witness:
"(Witness requested to taste fluid) After having examined this and tasting it, in my opinion, from my experience in drinking intoxicating liquors, the contents of that bottle is capable of producing intoxication; it hasn't hardly had time to have any effect yet, but it tastes like it. In my judgment a reasonable amount of it would make me drunk. That would be my judgment, the way it tastes and the effect it produces on my throat. . . . My judgment is now, based upon tasting and the effects on my throat, it would produce intoxication; a sufficient amount of this would make a man drunk. I generally carried corn whisky for a certain class of trade but I did not drink that kind myself." *Page 634 
We have reproduced this much of the testimony to make it clear that the State's witnesses having qualified as to their knowledge and experience, and having examined, smelled and tasted the liquor in question, said that it was intoxicating. This court would be very loath to say that a jury would not be justified in accepting and acting upon such testimony.
Appellant is not satisfied with our declaration that it is not indispensable to a conviction for transportation of intoxicating liquor that the transporter have a pecuniary interest in it, or that he exercise any claim of ownership. If the hired servant or employe or another could transport liquo and be held guiltless, the law against transportation would be wholly ineffectual. If one could drive a car through the country or in any other manner, or by any other means carry with him friends, strangers or persons in whom he had no interest, knowing them to be transporting intoxicating liquor, and be not held guilty, our law forbidding the tansportation of such liquor would be of no avail. It seems but reasonable to conclude that if one in good faith permitted another to ride with him, such other person having in his possession or upon his person intoxicating liquor without the knowledge of the driver of the car, there might be a question raised as to the sufficiency of the testimony to support conviction, but where one with unquestioned knowledge of the fact that a passenger in his car or one who is riding therein is transporting intoxicating liquor, we do not believe such person can escape by pleading that he was merely the driver of the car and that another person therein had the care, control and custody of such liquor.
We have been unable to agree with appellant in either contention, and the motion for rehearing is overruled.
Overruled.
          [Rehearing denied March 14, 1923. Reporter.]