DocketNumber: No. A-11842
Citation Numbers: 97 Okla. Crim. 375, 264 P.2d 364, 1953 OK CR 167, 1953 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 311
Judges: Brett, Jones, Powell
Filed Date: 12/2/1953
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
H. L. (Reno) Waltrip was charged by information in the district court of Tulsa county with unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor, second offense. A jury was waived and the defendant was tried before the court, found guilty and penalty was imposed by the court of a fine of $500. and imprisonment of 30 days in the county jail.
Only one question is presented, and that simply being whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction.
The state used but one witness, Roy Bradshaw, a deputy sheriff. He testified to searching a Chrysler coupe parked on the Fritz Dodge Oil Company lot in Tulsa. He had a search warrant. He did not see the defendant around the car, and had not seen the defendant later than ten days prior to the search. He first searched the front of the ear, and then went to an apartment house at 112 South Denver Street, Tulsa, where he had previously raided the defendant for liquor. Neither the defendant nor his wife was at this place, but witness secured a key from some third person at the apartment, returned to the parking lot, and unlocked the turtleback with the key some unidentified person gave him. He found a quantity of tax-paid liquor as the result of the search.
Counsel interposed a demurrer on behalf of the defendant at the close of the testimony of the officer, but the same was overruled. Thereupon the defendant testified and denied ownership of the coupe in question, and of the liquor, and denied driving it in the parking lot in question. He swore that at the time the officers searched the apartment house at 112 South Denver he did not live in the north apartment on the ground floor, but in the south apartment; that at the time of the search he was out of town looking after some cattle that he had purchased at a sale in Hominy; that he had sold out his whiskey business to one Dale Williams. He stated that he usually parked from one to four cars at a time in the parking lot where the search was made, as he bought and sold secondhand cars, and he paid rental by the month. He stated that he personally drove a ’50 Ford and a pick-up truck. He swore that he had never driven any car that was a Chrysler product except a ’29 Chrysler at one time.
At the preliminary examination the state had used one I. P. Mercer, the attendant at the parking yard where the DeSoto was searched, but it appears that he had moved to the State of New York at the time of the trial, so the defendant was granted permission to have the testimony given at the preliminary read to the court. The witness 'Stated that when the officers appeared they asked him if he knew who the DeSoto coupe belonged to and he told them that he thought it belonged to Reno [Waltrip] but he stated' that he did not see the defendant drive it in and had never seen him around it and that it had been parked next to the fence for several days. He stated that the defendant rented parking space by the month and parked from one to four cars there, and would leave the keys at the office for such cars as had to be moved. He further stated that fifteen to eighteen persons parked cars in the lot. Witness stated that defendant drove a Ford.
Counsel for defendant thus concluded his defense and the court announced that he found the defendant guilty. Motion for new trial was dictated and overruled, and sentence thereafter interposed.
The Attorney General has been unable to defend the record, and has not filed a brief, which amounts to a confession of error.
This court does not weigh the evidence, and where there is any competent evidence to support the judgment of the court, absent other error, will not reverse a case by reason of the contention that the evidence is insufficient. But here, while the defendant is an admitted bootlegger, and though he admitted that he had been convicted a number of times for liquor law violations, and whereas from the circumstances there is a merited suspicion that he had the liquor stored in the DeSoto car; a suspicion, no matter how well founded, cannot form the basis for the issuance of a search warrant or support a charge against a person informed against for crime. Malone v. State, 44 Okla. Cr. 330, 281 P. 153; Skelton v. State, 67 Okla. Cr. 215, 93 P. 2d 543; Mullus v. State, 32 Okla. Cr. 134, 240 P. 135. And likewise, even where the liquor may have been obtained
By reason of the insufficiency of the evidence, the judgment of the district court of Tulsa County is reversed.