On the trial the witness Robbins was allowed to testify to a conversation in the federal building in Mobile, between defendant and Judge Burgett, the federal commissioner, in which Burgett said he "smelled beer on defendant." This was hearsay evidence and technically should have been excluded as such, but, in view of defendant's own testimony on this trial that he did have mash or beer on his clothes which had been thrown by one of the arresting officers, this error is not such as would authorize a reversal of this case under Supreme Court rule 45.
Defendant's witness Higgins having testified positively as to what defendant was doing on the day and date on which it is charged defendant manufactured whisky, it was permissible on cross-examination to interrogate the witness as to defendant's whereabouts on other days near the time to test the recollection of witness.
The court was in error in sustaining the state's objection to defendant's question propounded to his witness Bosorge: "Did Claude Willis have anything to do with the still?" This called for an answer relevant to the issue being tried, but this error was immediately cured by the witness, who testified without objection that the still belonged to other parties, naming them, and that defendant was not operating the still or assisting in the operation and had not been there that day.
The most urgent insistence on the part of appellant is that the evidence is not sufficient upon which to base a conviction under the rule as laid down by this court to the effect that mere presence at a still is not sufficient in itself to sustain a conviction. Our attention is directed to several decisions of this court with all of which we are familiar. A decision much more in point as applied to the facts in this case is Washington v. State (Ala.App.) 107 So. 34.1 Here we have a complete still in operation, a supply of mash or beer on hand and some of it in process of manufacture, the isolation of the still place in a swamp, the presence of defendant, and he the only one, his clothes saturated with the beer, smut on his hands, clothes, and face, he a long way from his ordinary place of business, his unsatisfactory and contradictory explanation of his presence — the general surroundings and the facts make a jury question. Two juries have passed upon the facts and both say by their verdicts that they are convinced of the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The overturning the verdict of one jury is always a question of serious moment to this court, and in this case we do not feel authorized to do so.
There was no plea of former acquittal as to the second count of the indictment, and, there being evidence to sustain it, charge B was properly refused.
If the evidence was not sufficient to prove the venue, such fact should have been called to the attention of the trial court. *Page 609
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
1 Ante, p. 239.