Opinion of the Court by
Judge ClarkeAffirming.
Convicted of unlawfully possessing intoxicating liquor, appellant complains that all of the evidence of bis guilt was incompetent, and that same should have been excluded and Ms acquittal directed.
*288Acting under a search warrant issued upon an affidavit which is concededly defective, officers searched a garage immediately behind appellant’s residence in the city of Lexington, and there found thirty-five gallons of illicitly distilled whiskey. While the residence and garage are located upon the same lot and owned by the same party, it was established without contradiction that appellant rented only the residence and had no legal possession or control of the garage. He cannot, therefore, under the numerous decisions of this court, complain of the unwarranted search of the garage, nor of the introduction against him of evidence of the presence of the liquor thus discovered therein, provided his actual possession of the liquor, despite its location on the property of another, was satisfactorily established. Bowling v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 642, 237 S. W. 381; Keith v. Commonwealth, 197 Ky. 362, 247 S. W. 42.
That this liquor belonged to appellant and was in his possession and under his control, was established without contradiction, not only by proof of his subsequent admissions voluntarily made to the officers who found it, but also by proof of his plea of guilty in the federal district court, where, upon the same facts, a similar charge had been preferred against him. It is not contended that appellant’s admissions to these officers were incompetent, but it is seriously insisted that the proof of his plea in the federal court was inadmissible because proved by the oral testimony of one who was present and heard it rather than by a certified copy of the record.
We are of the opinion, however, that anyone who heard appellant make an oral statement with reference to the involved facts contrary to his interests is a competent witness to establish that fact, regardless of whether or not it was made in or out of court, and that it was not incumbent upon the Commonwealth to introduce the record simply because such admission was made in a court.
The plea was oral, and in our judgment the best evidence of what appellant then said is not what the record in that case may contain with reference thereto, but what persons, who were present and heard all that was actually said by appellant, may say under oath about it. The one action is not a bar to the other, although both were based upon the same factsv Hall v. Commonwealth, 197 Ky. 179, 246 S. W. 441; United States v. Vito Lanza, etc., 260 *289U. S. 377; hence that plea is not binding, and the question of whether or not appellant was acquitted or convicted in the federal court was wholly immaterial and incompetent upon the trial here. But what he said there with reference to his possession of this same liquor, it seems to us, was competent and provable by any one who heard it, just as any oral admission made anywhere would have been.
That a plea of guilty in another case involving the same facts is competent evidence against a defendant in a criminal case is generally recognized (16 C. J. 630), and this court so held in Ehrlich v. Commonwealth, 125 Ky. 742, 102 S. W. 289. But the question of how the plea may be proved has not been passed upon by this court, and we have been able to find only three cases from other courts where this question was raised or discussed. In State v. Hermanson, 22 N. D. 125, 132 N. W. 415, Ann. Cas. 1914A 1052, it was held that such a plea might be established by any one who heard it or by copy of the record. In Bowman v. State, 73 Tex. Cr. 194, 164 S. W. 846, it was held a plea of guilty to another offense must be shown by the record, while in State v. Call, 100 Me. 403, 61 A. 833, the court held a plea of guilty to the same offense need not be so proved.
The question, of course, is whether the record is the best evidence of what then occurred, and not simply its legal effect. As the plea was oral, it would seem, under general principles, it could be established by any one who heard it, just as any other oral admission against interest. This is especially true, we think, where the plea was made, as here, in another case, and where it is not binding upon the defendant but is evidence against him simply as an admission. Under all the cases as well as general principles the defendant was entitled to have the jury hear and consider not merely the legal effect of what he said, which no doubt is all the record would show, but all that he then said. 16 C. J. 634. Besides, as the plea then made was not binding upon him but was simply evidentiary as an admission against interest, he had the right to explain it or even deny its truth. Hence, in our judgment, the record, if competent, as probably it was to prove the fact that he then pleaded guilty where the same issue was on trial, certainly was not the best evidence of what defendant actually said in making the admission of guilt.
*290If Ms plea bad been in -writing, tbe writing and not the clerk’s record of its legal effect wonld bave been tbe best evidence of bis plea, and so, too, we tbink, wben tbe plea was oral, tbe thing to be proved was not what tbe clerk may bave recorded about it, but tbe plea itself as actually made by tbe defendant, and as this was oral, it could not be proved in its entirety and as actually made by tbe record, or except by oral testimony of persons who beard just what tbe defendant then said.
We therefore conclude that tbe court did not err in permitting tbe Commonwealth in tbe first instance to prove orally just what defendant said on. entering bis plea on the other case, by one who was present and' beard it, rather than requiring tbe Commonwealth simply to prove tbe record and then permitting tbe defendant, as would bave been bis right, to prove orally all that be then said relevant to tbe issue on this trial.
Judgment affirmed.