Court Opinion

ID: 3532622
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:45:15.377775+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:20:37.680121
License: Public Domain

The defendant was indicted by the grand jury of Callaway County at the May term, 1921, of the circuit court, for transporting intoxicating liquor, viz: Jamaica ginger. On May 18, 1921, the prosecuting attorney made affidavit for a search warrant, alleging he believed that in a woodshed back of the Attwood Bakery in Fulton a quantity of intoxicating liquors had been stored on May 14, 1921, by one J.B. Fenley, who, the affiant believes, has been unlawfully selling intoxicating liquors. Upon this affidavit the clerk of the circuit court issued a search warrant, which, after setting forth the material portions of the affidavit as to the place to be searched, its ownership and the belief that the defendant had intoxicating liquor stored therein, directed the sheriff to search the same and produce the liquors found before the judge of the circuit court. Tried to a jury the defendant was convicted and fined $150, from which judgment he appeals.
The defendant filed a motion to quash the search warrant for the reason that it violated the Constitution of the United States and that of the State of Missouri, especially Sections 11 and 30 of Article II of the latter, and asked that the testimony procured thereby be suppressed. Evidence was introduced on the motion showing that no record had been made of the filing of the application for the search warrant and that the same had been issued by the clerk of the circuit court. The sheriff testified that he searched the woodshed described in the search warrant; that the store of the defendant is not situated on the same lot or block with the Attwood Bakery, but is across the street; that upon searching the woodshed he found several boxes and barrels of empty Jamaica ginger bottles; that he brought the bottles before the grand jury and that he didn't know under whose control the shed was. This was all the testimony on the motion except that the indictment and the motion to quash were introduced in evidence.
The evidence for the State tended to show that Walter Roberts was working for appellant in his grocery *Page 539 
store in Fulton; that during Christmas week, 1920, Roberts, his wife and two others, went to St. Louis to do some Christmas shopping; that appellant asked Roberts to go to the O'Keefe grocery in St. Louis and get a package for him; that the next morning after they reached St. Louis Roberts went to the O'Keefe grocery and got the package, which was a large paper box, open at the top, and in which were several sealed cartons bearing the label "Sunday Girl Jamaica Ginger." This package was brought to Fulton by Roberts and delivered to appellant at about eleven o'clock Monday night. No witness testified as to the contents of the cartons save as indicated by the labels.
Mrs. Roberts testified that a short time before the grand jury met in May the appellant came to her and told her he had come to put a bug in her ear, that: "People who went before the grand jury and didn't know what to say were a blowed up cookie." She also testified that the label on the cartons stated that the contents were ninety per cent alcohol.
The State offered Fletcher Thompson as a witness, who testified that sometime during the preceeding winter (1920) he bought a carton of Jamaica ginger from appellant for which he gave him eight dollars. He did not remember the brand of Jamaica ginger, and did not tell Fenley what he wanted with it. Witness testified that he bought it to drink and did drink it; that on or about that time Jamaica ginger was used in that community as a beverage. The check with which witness paid for the Jamaica ginger was offered in evidence. On cross-examination witness testified that he went to appellant's place of business with a man named Harry Reid; that the latter went in and had a talk with Fenley before the transaction; that there wasn't any name or label on the carton; that he didn't know what amount of alcohol it contained, but that it had an effect on him different to alcohol and whiskey. It would merely burn him, and that was all the effect it had except it gave him a sleepy feeling. *Page 540 
A boy, named Fletcher, who had been employed by the defendant as a truck driver, testifying for the State, said that he had helped move a barrel and two or three boxes of empty Jamaica ginger bottles from defendant's store to the shed back of Attwood's Bakery, owned and controlled by the defendant; that defendant was in the store at the time and that the bottles were sitting at the head of the stairs; that the defendant had been in the habit of buying bottles of all descriptions from boys; that the bottles in question were moved across the main street in broad daylight just before noon.
Bishop, the sheriff, testified that under the search warrant he searched the woodshed described therein, and found the bottles which were taken by him and later presented to the grand jury; that he didn't know who owned the shed; that the defendant was not present at the time the search was made, but came later when they were hauling the bottles away.
Maddox, a deputy sheriff, testified that he went with the sheriff to search the woodshed, and that after the search was made and the sheriff had gone to get a truck to haul the bottles away defendant appeared and told them that he had bought some of the bottles seized, put new labels on them and refilled them himself.
Pollard, a registered druggist, testified that the commercial commodity known as Jamaica ginger contained from sixty-five to ninety-five per cent of alcohol, depending on the manufacture, but on cross-examination admitted that he did not know anything about the special brand of Jamaica ginger known as "Sunday Girl," and that he had never heard of it.
The indictment is as follows: "The Grand Jurors for the State of Missouri, impaneled, sworn and charged to inquire within and for the body of the County of Callaway, and State aforesaid, upon their oath present and charge that J.B. Fenley on or about the 20th day of December, 1920, at the County of Callaway and State of Missouri, did then and there transport intoxicating liquors by and through his agent Walter Roberts, to-wit: *Page 541 
One gross of two ounce bottles, containing Jamaica ginger, the said ginger containing more than one-half of one per cent alcohol, from St. Louis, Missouri, to Fulton, Missouri, forbeverage purposes, which act was then and there unlawful; by the laws of the State of Missouri in such cases made and provided; against the peace and dignity of the State."
The offense charged is a misdemeanor. The jurisdiction of this court is due to the defensive interposition of a constitutional question.
I. The defendant was charged in another proceeding with having sold intoxicating liquors. The material portions of the testimony in that and the instant case are the same. In the other proceeding it was sought, in addition to the introduction of evidence to prove a sale, to supplement or add theretoAnother   by the offering and admission of testimony of theOffense.  finding by the sheriff, under the authority of a search warrant, of a large number of empty bottles — not on the premises of the defendant — but which property while being removed was claimed by him. Also by the offering and admission in evidence of the transportation from St. Louis of some cartons labeled "Jamaica Ginger" to the defendant's place of business in Fulton. In the instant case, after showing the fact last stated, the testimony introduced in the other case was likewise admitted in this. This manner of proving the commission by a defendant of two or more offenses of a kindred nature is not subject to serious objection when properly limited. This limitation is not confined to the volume of the testimony offered as to the incidental facts and circumstances, but as to their character as related to the principal offense, and their nearness in time to its occurrence. If dissimilar in character or remote in time from the offense charged they are not properly admitted in evidence.
II. The validity of the indictment is challenged. In charging a misdemeanor, as at bar, the same strictness is not required as in cases of felony. [State v. Nash, 283 *Page 542 
Mo. l.c. 34; State ex rel. Zehnder v. Robertson, 262 Mo. l.c. 621; State v. Ladd, 216 S.W. (Mo.) 1004.] Within reasonable bounds therefore — by which we mean that enoughIndictment.  must appear in the charge to notify the defendant of the nature and cause of the complaint — a more liberal construction may be given to an indictment for a misdemeanor to determine its sufficiency, than to one charging a graver offense.
This rule is especially applicable where the charge, as here, is under a statute (Art. VII, Chap. 92, R.S. 1919) which provides, among other things, that: "It shall not be necessary in any affidavit, information or indictment to give the name of the purchaser or to include any defensive negative averments, but it shall be sufficient to state that the act complained of was then and there prohibited and unlawful." [Sec. 6596, R.S. 1919.]
This rule of interpretation which may also be termed a special Statute of Jeofails, simplifies the question as to the sufficiency of this indictment. Charging as it does, a statutory offense, we find that it is drawn in the language of the law of its creation which sets forth all of the constituent elements of the crime. [Sec. 6588, R.S. 1919, as amended, Laws 1921, p. 414; State v. Perkins, 240 S.W. (Mo. App.) 851; State v. Bersch, 276 Mo. l.c. 412.]
However, further objection is urged to the indictment in that it charges the act of the defendant to have been through an agent, instead of directly by the defendant. This contention cannot form the basis for a charge of variance. In a misdemeanor case all the participants in the offense are principals. [Cooley v. Commonwealth, 243 S.W. (Ky.) 915; State v. Sheehan, 190 Pac. (Ida.) 71.] While the defendant did not participate in the physical transportation of the liquor it was shown that it was transported for him and in compliance with his order and that he received it at its destination. Under such a state of facts the proof would have sustained the charge had it been made directly against the defendant. This being true, *Page 543 
the averment that the act was committed by an agent for the defendant, instead of constituting a variance and hence a ground of complaint, more fully informed the defendant of the nature and cause of the accusation against him and better enabled him to prepare his defense. It is elementary that the material facts which constitute the offense charged must be stated in an indictment and they must be proved by the evidence. Only as incidental to and explanatory of the main charge as to the defendant's guilty connection with this transaction, was it necessary to offer any proof in regard thereto. That the prosecuting attorney, out of the abundance of caution, deemed it necessary to thus charge the offense and denominate Roberts as the defendant's agent, instead of directly averring the act as that of the defendant, will not vitiate the indictment because the unnecessary averment was not descriptive of the identity of the legal essentials of the charge in the indictment. The transportation by another having been shown as incidental the essentials to establish the offense were the defendant's order for and his approval of the act by his receiving the liquor when it reached its destination. [State v. Sheehan, 190 Pac. (Ida.) 71; Benson v. State, 254 S.W. (Tex. Cr. App.) 793.]
III. It is further contended that the trial court erred in not sustaining the motion to quash the search warrant and in permitting the sheriff to testify to the result of the search made thereunder. The search warrant having been issued by the clerk of the circuit court without an order of thatSearch    court was unauthorized and conferred no power on theWarrant.  officer. The statute (Sec. 6595, R.S. 1919, as amended, Laws 1921, p. 416) under which application was made for the warrant by the prosecuting attorney, conferred no authority for its issuance upon the circuit clerk, and we held in State v. Hyde, 297 Mo. l.c. 217, that a writ thus issued was a nullity. In addition, it was not directed against the property of the defendant and furnished no ground of complaint *Page 544 
based on a violation of his constitutional rights. [Jones v. United States, 296 F. 632; Lakes v. Commonwealth, 254 S.W. (Ky.) 908; Bowling v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 642, 237 S.W. 381; United States v. Kaplan, 286 F. 963; Chicco v. United States, 284 Fed. l.c. 436; Haywood v. United States, 268 Fed. (C.C.A.) l.c. 803.]
The defendant having suffered no injury within the meaning of the Constitution in having the premises of another invaded under the seeming authority of a search warrant, has no ground of complaint and the court did not commit error in overruling the motion to quash the writ.
IV. The further objection was made to the testimony in regard to the removal of the bottles to and from the shed of the Baking Company, that it was too remote from the offense charged. The date of the latter was in December, 1920, and the finding of the bottles in the shed and their removal therefrom wasRemote        in May, 1921, or more than five months after theOccurrences.  alleged unlawful transportation of the liquor and its receipt by the defendant. It is not deemed necessary to discuss this question which we have more fully considered in the companion case against this defendant, reported at page 520 of this Report, in which he is charged with the unlawful sale of liquor, than to say, as we have said in deducing the rule from the cases there cited, that the time which had clapsed between the occurrence of the evidentiary and the principal facts was sufficiently remote to render the former unworthy of admission in evidence to prove the latter. [State v. Sebastian, 81 Conn. 4.]
V. The testimony of Fletcher Thompson, who bought Jamaica ginger from the defendant in January, 1921, was objected to on the ground that it had relation to and only tended to prove a separate and distinct offense than that for which the defendant was on trial. The attitude of the State in answer to the objection to this testimony was that it tended to prove the purpose for which *Page 545 
the liquor was transported, or more directly that its purpose was to show the intent with which the offense charged was committed. The trial court evidently entertained a like view of the purpose of the testimony and therefore overruled the defendant's objection thereto. That there are many offenses which admit of the proof of other crimes it may be admitted; also that there is a tendency on the part of the trial courts to rule more liberally in the admission of this character of testimony. This latitude is recognized in the latest and most comprehensive treaties on criminal evidence (Underhill Cr. Ev. (3 Ed.) p. 200), and the correctness of the author's conclusions are demonstrated by the citation of many authorities. Where, however, the facts are such that the defendant was bound to know the nature and character of his act, as he was in this case, proof of other offenses is not admissible to show intent. The St. Louis Court of Appeals, in a case (State v. Seidler, 267 S.W. 424) in which the defendant was charged with the unlawful possession and sale of intoxicating liquor, held that in violations of the prohibition law criminal intent is not, as a rule, a necessary element and need not be shown. In an earlier case (State v. Stike, 149 Mo. App. 104) in which the defendant was charged with selling liquor to a minor, testimony of other and distinct sales were held to be properly excluded. The admission of the testimony of this witness was therefore unauthorized.
The guilt of the defendant is not a matter of much doubt from the evidence adduced. [State v. Bennett, 270 S.W. (Mo.) 295.] It is to be regretted, therefore, that the errors noted will necessitate a reversal and a remanding of this case that it may be tried as here indicated. It is so ordered. All concur. *Page 546