Lake City v. Gilliland

Supreme Court of South Carolina
Lake City v. Gilliland, 85 S.E. 312 (S.C. 1915)
101 S.C. 152; 1915 S.C. LEXIS 102
Hydrick

Lake City v. Gilliland

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

*153 Respondent was tried before the mayor of Lake City and a jury for selling liquor in violation of an ordinance of the town. There were three trials. The first two resulted in mistrials. On the third, the jury found respondent, guilty. From sentence he appealed to the Circuit Court, which overruled all his grounds of appeal, except two, upon which a new trial was orderd.. From that order the town appealed to this Court.

The Circuit Court erred in sustaining the exception that the bottle of whiskey introduced in evidence was not identified. It was positively identified by the witness, Green, and circumstantially by the other testimony in the case sufficiently to allow its admission in evidence.

The Court erred also in sustaining the exception that the testimony had not been taken down in writing, and signed by the witnesses. When respondent’s attorney knew, as he did, that the testimony was not being so taken down and signed, and made no objection, he waived the right to have it so taken. Greenville v. Latimer, 80 S. C. 92, 61 S. E. 224; Abbeville v. Gooseby, 93 S. C. 370, 76 S. E. 977; Summer v. Hogan, 96 S. C. 302, 80 S. E. 497.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and that of the mayor’s Court affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Lake City v. Gilliland.
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published
Syllabus
' Evidence. Exhibits. Admissibility. Practice. Irregularities. 1. Evidence — Exhibits—Admissibility.—There being testimony identifying an exhibit offered in evidence, it should be admitted by the Court. 2. Municipal Courts — Irregulirities—Waiver.—The stenographic taking of testimony, with the knowledge and acquiescence of defendant’s. counsel in a municipal Court, instead of having it taken in longhand and subscribed by the witness, is a mere irregularity, which is waived by defendant’s failure to object.