Reversing.
Tbe appellant, Beatrice Scott, was convicted of keeping intoxicating liquor for sale in local ojotion or dry territory. Tbe penalty was fixed at sixty days in jail and $100 fine. KRS 242.230, 242.990. Tbe motion for an appeal is sustained.
Tbe appellant was in possession of a building in Betsy Lane, Floyd County, in February, 1949. Sbe operated a restaurant, soft drink bar and dance ball in part of it and occupied tbe other part as living quarters. A door opened between tbe two.
Under a search warrant, officers found 26 or 28 half pint bottles of whiskey in a bedroom and more than a case of beer in a refrigerator in tbe kitchen of tbe residence part of tbe building. There was no disclaimer of ownership or possession of tbe intoxicants by Mrs. Scott at tbe time. Tbe officers found a drunken man behind tbe door in tbe restaurant and a practically empty one-balf pint and a pint bottle that bad con
There is no merit in the appellant’s contention that the evidence was not. sufficient to take the case to the jury. The cases cited, Gossett v. Commonwealth, 262 Ky. 540, 90 S. W. 2d 730, Bingham v. Commonwealth, 308 Ky. 737, 215 S. W. 2d 845, do not sustain the argument. The circumstances fully sustain the submission and the verdict. Strong v. Commonwealth, 297 Ky. 591, 180 S. W. 2d 560; Barns v. Commonwealth, 305 Ky. 481, 204 S. W. 2d 801.
The presence of the liquor on the defendant’s premises was admitted. She sought to overcome the presumption and to avoid liability by evidence that it was in the possession of other persons. This brings the case within the rule that an accused person is entitled to have an affirmative defense submitted by a concrete instruction. Gossett v. Commonwealth, supra; Patrick v. Commonwealth, 286 Ky. 265, 150 S. W. 2d 901. See Stanley’s Instructions to Juries, Supplement, Section 771.
Such instructions heretofore approved in cases involving the possession of intoxicating liquor all seem to have been under the state-wide prohibition statute, which made it a violation of law merely to have such a beverage in possession when it had been unlawfully acquired. So, the form of the instruction was that if the liquor was on the defendant’s premises without his
Upon another 'trial, the court may give an instruction in substantially this form:
If the jury believe from the evidence that the beer referred to was being kept by Red Scott and the whiskey was being kept by James Barkley, and that the defendant had no interest in either the beer or the whiskey or had no direct or indirect management or control over the possession thereof, you will find the defendant not guilty.
The judgment is reversed.