Alabama Court of Appeals, 1918

Jones v. City of Montgomery

Jones v. City of Montgomery
Alabama Court of Appeals · Decided January 15, 1918 · Samford
77 So. 969; 16 Ala. App. 357; 1918 Ala. App. LEXIS 37 (Southern Reporter)

Jones v. City of Montgomery

Opinion of the Court

SAMFORD, J.

It was shown on the trial that two of the police officers of the city of Montgomery, on the 23d day of April, 1917, went into a room at 8% Washington street, in the city of Montgomery, upstairs, which room was being occupied by the defendant as a bedroom; that the room was over a vacant store in the second story of the building, and was entered from the street; that in the room at the time was found 48 bottles of beer, 12 of which were on ice and the remaining 36 were in a burean drawer in the room; that the ground floor was a vacant storeroom, unoccupied hut for rent, and that the second story of the building was used exclusively for bedrooms.

There was no one else present besides the defendant, who had on a former occasion been convicted for selling liquor. The building was not used exclusively for a dwelling, and therefore the keeping of liquors or beverages forbidden by the laws of the state to he manufactured, sold, or otherwise disposed of was prima facie evidence that the beer was kept for sale or with the intent to sell the same contrary to law. Acts 1915, p. 9, § 4. The other facts in the case were sufficient to warrant the judge in finding the defendant guilty.

We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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