State v. Foxworth
Decision Date | 07 November 1924 |
Docket Number | 11600. |
Citation | 125 S.E. 131,129 S.C. 478 |
Parties | STATE v. FOXWORTH ET AL. |
Court | South Carolina Supreme Court |
Appeal from General Sessions Circuit Court of Berkeley County; C. C Featherstone, Judge.
Sam Foxworth and others were convicted of making, storing, and having unlawful possession of intoxicating liquors, and they appeal. Affirmed.
Wolfe & Dennis, of Monks Corner, for appellants.
A. J Hydrick, Sol., of Orangeburg, for the State.
The defendants were convicted under "an indictment charging them with making, storing, and having in unlawful possession intoxicating liquors."
Their appeal to this court presents for determination two questions, which will be considered in the order discussed by appellants' counsel.
The first is whether his honor, Judge Featherstone, erred in charging "that circumstantial evidence is just as good as positive evidence, provided it is properly made out." The point that this charge constituted prejudicial error, in that it was a charge on the facts, is conclusively settled against appellants' contention by the decision of this court in the recent case of State v. Jackson, 122 S.C. 493, 115 S.E. 750. See, also, State v. Johnson, 66 S.C. 23, 44 S.E. 58, and State v. Mittle, 120 S.C. 538, 113 S.E. 335.
The second question is whether prejudicial error was committed by the circuit court in admitting over objection and in refusing to strike out "evidence that the officers had a search warrant, when none was produced and no proof of its loss adduced." The record does not clearly disclose that the precise point sought to be raised here was distinctly made in, or ruled on by, the circuit court. In so far as the trial judge's rulings in this phase of the case involved the holding that proof of the execution and existence of a valid search warrant was not a prerequisite to the introduction of incrimnating evidence against the defendants derived from and based upon a search of their premises, his rulings were in accord with the views of this court as announced and applied in the recent cases of State v. Kanellos, 124 S.C. 514, 117 S.E. 640; State v. Prescott, 125 S.C. 22, 117 S.E. 637; State v. Maes (S. C.) 120 S.E. 576; State v Brown, (S. C.) 124 S.E. 87. If so, it is apparent that neither the execution, existence, nor contents of the search warrant constituted a primary or material issue in the case that is, the search warrant in question was a document...
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