Dugan v. State

Decision Date08 January 1918
Docket NumberNo. 23326.,23326.
PartiesDUGAN v. STATE.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Criminal Court, Marion County; H. C. Austill, Special Judge.

Michael Dugan was convicted, and appeals. Affirmed.Eph Inman, J. T. Markey, and Edwin Steers, all of Indianapolis, for appellant. Ele Stansbury, of Indianapolis, Elmer E. Hastings, of Washington, Ind., and Dale F. Stansbury, of Indianapolis, for the State.

LAIRY, J.

Appellant was convicted in the trial court on an indictment charging him with having unlawfully kept, run, and operated a place where intoxicating liquors were bartered, sold, and given away in violation of section 1 of an act in force March 16, 1907. Acts 1907, p. 689; section 8351, Burns 1914.

The overruling of appellant's motion for a new trial is the only error assigned, and the only errors presented by the briefs relate to the action of the trial court in giving instructions to the jury alleged to be erroneous and in refusing to give instruction numbered 1 tendered by appellant. As shown by the evidence appellant held a license for the sale of intoxicating liquor for a room located on the first floor of a building in Indianapolis, Ind., known as the Plaza Hotel, and he operated a bar in the room covered by the license. On the top floor of the building was a café and roof garden. Appellant rented the room in which the bar was operated, and also the café and roof garden rooms, paying as rent therefor $200 a month. The evidence of appellant himself shows that intoxicating liquors procured at his bar were served and consumed with his knowledge and consent in the café conducted on the roof garden.

The theory of the state is that appellant was keeping, running, and operating the place designated as the Plaza Café and Roof Garden on the 23d day of December, 1916, and that intoxicating liquors were sold there in violation of law. The theory of the defendant is that no intoxicating liquors were sold in the café, but that they were sold in the licensed barroom of appellant to waiters from the café, who came to the barroom with money of the patrons of the café and purchased such liquors as the agent of such patrons to be served to them in the café.

Under the evidence, the jury was required to determine whether the waiters sold and delivered the liquor in the café as the agents of appellant collecting the money in advance for appellant, or whether they purchased the liquor at the licensed bar of appellant as the agents of patrons of the café with money furnished by patrons for that purpose. The decision was adverse to appellant. The issue of fact thus presented was fully and fairly submitted to the jury by the court under instructions No. 9, 10, and 11. Appellant has no just reason to complain of the refusal of the court to give instruction No. 1 tendered by him on the same subject, for the reason that it was fully covered by the instructions to which reference has been made.

Complaint is made of that part of instruction No. 5 in which the jury was told that before it could find the defendant guilty it must find beyond a reasonable doubt that he kept, owned, and operated a place, and that some one at the place sold, bartered, or gave away intoxicating liquors in violation of law. It is asserted that the words “some one” are too general in their import, being broad enough to include a stranger having no connection with the place, who might carry a flask of intoxicating liquor into the place, and while there give it to a friend. The instruction may be subject to the technical objection urged, but it is not at all likely that the jury so understood it. There was no evidence that any one other than the waiters employed in the café handled any intoxicating liquor in the place, but the evidence shows that if any sales were made there they were made by the waiters. By the words “some one,” as used in the instruction, the court meant some one employed in connection with the place; some one of the waiters. The jury no doubt understood...

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