State v. Cowan
State v. Cowan
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In an information containing three counts Leck Cowan and Banty McCullough were jointly charged with being persistent violators of the prohibitory liquor law. One count was for an unlawful sale and the other two charged the maintenance of nuisances at two places, but the defendants were convicted only of the sale.
Upon this appeal it is contended by the defendants that there was error in permitting the introduction in evidence of four search-and-seizure warrants issued against two places described in the nuisance counts. The objection is that the warrants tended to prove offenses other than those charged against the defendants. The warrants were evidently offered in support of the nuisance counts upon which no conviction was had. In connection with the introduction of the warrants the sheriff, in whose hands they were placed, testified that he went to the places named to serve the warrants and found beer, whisky and gin in considerable quantities, and these were found within the times named in the information during which the defendants were alleged to have maintained nuisances at these places.
The evidence not being preserved it must also be assumed on this appeal that there was sufficient competent evidence of a first conviction and also of the sale of which the defendants were convicted.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The State of Kansas v. Leck Cowan and Banty McCullough
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Criminal Law — Three Counts — Evidence Competent under Either Count Admissible — Instructions. Evidence admissible to establish one phase of a case and not of another may be received and its application limited by the court in its instructions to the jury to the purpose for which it is competent, and in the absence of the instructions it may be assumed upon appeal that the court advised the jury that the evidence was confined to the purpose for which it was competent.