Hitt v. Commonwealth
Hitt v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant, Tony Hitt, was indicted for violation of the State prohibition act. The indictment was in the general blanket form suggested in section 7 of the act, and charged that Tony Hitt “* * * did unlawfully manufacture, sell, offer, keep, store and expose for sale, give away, transport, dispense, solicit, advertise and receive orders for ardent spirits, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Virginia.”
The verdict was in the following form: “We, the jury, find the accused, Tony Hitt, guilty as charged in the indictment, and fix his punishment at a fine of $50.00 with confinement in jail for one month.” The trial court sentenced the defendant acordingly, and to that sentence this writ of error was awarded.
Briefly stated, the material facts are these: Hitt lived at Elkton, in Rockingham county, about twenty miles from
We have omitted some of the details of the evidence, but have considered it all most carefully, and as we view the case no responsibility can be placed upon the defendant in so far as the suit case is concerned. He was in bad company, but he connot be convicted of a crime upon mere suspicion, and unless we resort to that we must treat the charge against him as if the bottle of whiskey above referred to contained the only ardent spirits in the car.
The question then is, whether the defendant could, by reason of his conduct with respect to the bottle, be lawfully convicted of any offense charged in the indictment under which he was tried.
It appears to be also conceded by the Attorney-General (though the trial court thought otherwise) that even if sec
These conclusions seem clear from the terms of the act, and are sustained by the decision of this court in Lane v. Commonwealth, 122 Va. 916, 95 S. E. 466.
The indictment does, however, charge the defendant with unlawfully transporting ardent spirits, and the real question in this case is whether under the evidence he can be held guilty of that charge.
This instruction left the jury no discretion, and was very probably the cause of the verdict. Whether so or not, the instruction was erroneous, and, furthermore, the verdict was without sufficient evidence to support it.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment complained of will be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded to the circuit court for such further proceedings as the Commonwealth may be advised to take therein, not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Tony Hitt v. Commonwealth
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- 12 cases
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- Syllabus
- 1. Intoxicating Liquors—Indictment and. Information—Blanket Form of Indictment Suggested in Section 7 of the Prohibition Acts—Conviction, of Drinking or Receiving Whiskey.—Accused was indicted for violation of the State prohibition act, Acts 1918, ch. 388. The indictment was in the general blanket form suggested in section 7 of the act. Held: That as the indictment did not embrace the charge of drinking whiskey contrary to section 37 of the act, nor of receiving ardent spirits contrary to section 40 of the act, the accused could not be convicted of either of these offenses under the act. 2. Intoxicating Liquors—Receiving Ardent .Spirits—Section U0 of .the Prohibition Act.—It would seem that section 40 of the prohibition act against receiving or accepting ardent spirits would ■not apply to the. act of taking two drinks from a bottle tendered by a companion in an automobile. 3. Intoxicating Liquors—Prohibition Act—Baggage.—A quart of liquor in one’s pocket or in his automqbile cannot be considered in his baggage within the meaning of the prohibition act, even though not, inclosed in any other receptacle than the bottle itself. 4. Intoxicating Liquors—Transportation of Liquor—-Transportation Need Not Be for Sale.—Section 3 of the prohibition act (Acts 1918, ch. 388) prohibits every transportation of ardent liquors, whether for sale or not, subject only to the express exceptions in the prohibition act. 5. ■ Intoxicating Liquors—Indictment and Information—Blanket- , Form Not Exclusive.—The .provisions of section 7 of the prohi- . bition act, suggesting the blanket form of indictment, do not necessarily restrict the form of indictment therein prescribed > to use under the’ specified sections 3, 3-a, 4 and 5 of the act-The- act.merely .provides that it or any other good form of in- . dietment shall be sufficient for any such violations. Consequently, where the general blanket form was used, it charged án unlawful transportation, and there being no demurrer or'objection, was sufficient even if the conviction depended solely upon the establishment of a violation of section 39 of the prohibition act. 6. Intoxicating Liquors—Prohibition Act—General Verdict.—Under the general blanket form of indictment suggested in section 7 of the prohibition act (Acts 1918, ch. 388), a general verdict of guilty is not defective for failure to point out the particular offenses of which accused was found guilty. 7. Verdict—Autrefois Acquit or Convict—General Verdict.—A general verdict of guilty upon an indictment charging several ■ offenses will protect a defendant from a subsequent prosecution for any thereof. 8. Intoxicating Liquors—Transportation—Accomplices and Accessories.—Accused while riding in an automobile with two companions took two drinks from a bottle tendered him by one of his companions. Held: That accused merely by reason of the fact that he momentarily had the bottle in his hand while he was drinking from it, did not become an actor in transporting the whiskey, and therefore was not a principal in the first degree in the offense of transporting. 9. Accomplices and Accessories—Misdemeanors—Common Law.— By the common law with respect to misdemeanors there is no distinction between principals and accessories; all participants being regarded as principals. 10. Accomplices and Accessories—Definition of Accessory.—An accessory is one not present at the commission of the offense, but who is in some way concerned therein, either before or after, as contriver, instigator, or adviser, or as a receiver or protector of the perpetrator. 11. Accomplices and Accessories—Principal in Second Degree— Transportation of Liquor.—Accused by taking two drinks from a bottle tendered him by a companion in an automobile did not become guilty of the offense of transporting the liquor as a principal in the second degree upon the principle that, being present, he aided and abetted the act. His conduct in drinking from the bottle may have indicated an approval of what they had done and were continuing to do, but it cannot be fairly said to have constituted him a participant in the transportation either as a principal or an accessory. 12. Intoxicatinc Liquors—Prohibition, Act—Transporting Liquor —Instructions.—Accused while riding in an automobile with two companions took two drinks from a bottle of whiskey tendered him by one of his companions. The court instructed the jury that the transportation of even one quart of intoxicating liquor, or less, from Elkton to Harrisonburg, was an unlawful act under the prohibition law, and that, if accused accompanied his companions on the trip, knowing there was liquor in the car, and drank with them from a bottle, then he was guilty under the law, whether he knew that a suit case in the car contained liquor or not. Held-: That the instruction left the jury no discretion, and in any event was erroneous.