Opinion
36105.
DECIDED MARCH 14, 1956.
Certiorari. Before Judge Whitman. Fulton Superior Court. December 27, 1955.
James H. Dodgen, for plaintiff in error.
J. C. Savage, J. C. Murphy, J. M. B. Bloodworth, Henry L. Bowden, Newell Edenfield, Robert S. Wiggins, contra.
1. The attack made on the validity of the ordinance under which the defendant was convicted is insufficient to present the issue to this court for determination.
2. The evidence is insufficient to show a violation of the ordinance in question. Accordingly, the trial court erred in refusing to sanction the application for writ of certiorari.
DECIDED MARCH 14, 1956.
The defendant Flora Wood was tried and convicted in the Municipal Court of Atlanta for violation of a city ordinance prohibiting the maintaining of a dive, a dive being defined in the City Code as follows: "A place where alcoholic, malt or vinous liquors are kept or sold, and where men and women are permitted to come and drink alcoholic, malt or vinous liquors, either in the place or room where such liquors are kept and sold, or in a place of business, or other place connected therewith, or in a place not connected with such place where such liquors are kept or sold, and where men and women drink or commit acts of immorality in such place, or a place where men or women idle away their time without visible means of support and do not do any work, shall be known as a dive." (Emphasis added). The only testimony offered was as follows: "On entering [defendant's] residence, we found seven people in the residence, including men and women; on the mantel of the room where these seven people were congregated we found a drinking glass partially filled with non-taxed whisky; we then entered the kitchen and found on a table a drinking glass partially filled with non-taxed whisky; one of those present in the room when we first entered was one Crawford Brown, who had passed out from the effect of whisky; also among those present was one Robert Watson, a vagrant." The defendant after conviction filed her application for writ of certiorari in the Superior Court of Fulton County, and the exception is to the judgment of that court refusing to sanction the same.
1. Fulton County being a wet county, to which the provisions of Chapter 58-1 do not apply, Code § 58-104, making it a misdemeanor to keep or maintain a place where the liquors prohibited by Chapter 58-1 are drunk is not of force within the limits of such county ( Robinson v. State, 88 Ga. App. 509, 76 S.E.2d 817) and accordingly the ordinance under which the defendant was convicted is not void as being in conflict with this statute in its operation. Whether the ordinance would be invalid for other reasons as making penal that which, under the provisions of Chapter 58-10 has been legalized, or because in conflict with State statutes covering the same subject matter, is a question which was not raised in the trial court and is accordingly not before this court for decision.
2. The offense set out in the ordinance is that of maintaining a place (a) where the proprietor keeps or sells alcoholic liquors, permitting men and women to come there and either drink or commit acts of immorality, or (b) where the proprietor maintains a place where men and women come to idle away their time without working, such men and women having no visible means of support. The testimony in support of the charge is that on a single occasion a woman was found in her home with seven other persons, both men and women. One of these persons was drunk. One was characterized as a vagrant, but it is not shown how long he had been in the house and whether or not he was "idling away his time" there. Each of these facts individually and all of them put together are perfectly consistent with the hypothesis that the defendant was, on this single occasion, entertaining a group of friends, and that she or they or some of them were violating the penal statute relating to possession of non-tax-paid liquor. There is no evidence whatever that she was maintaining the premises for the purposes prohibited, nor is there evidence that liquor was either kept or sold on the premises, that acts of immorality were committed, or that any disorderly or other illegal act was being performed. The maintaining of premises for illegal purposes usually connotes more than one isolated transaction ( Fanning v. State, 17 Ga. App. 316, 86 S.E. 731); Bell v. State, 92 Ga. 49, 18 S.E. 186); Bluhakis v. State, 18 Ga. App. 112 ( 88 S.E. 911); Smith v. State, 36 Ga. App. 630 ( 137 S.E. 791); Ward v. State, 14 Ga. App. 110 ( 80 S.E. 295); Cummings v. State, 25 Ga. App. 319 ( 103 S.E. 193). Where the evidence is equally consonant with either guilt or innocence on the part of the accused of the particular charge of which she stands convicted, it is not sufficient to exclude every reasonable doubt save that of her guilt.
Accordingly, the evidence is not sufficient upon which to predicate the conviction, and the judge of the superior court erred in refusing to sanction the application for writ of certiorari.
Judgment reversed. Gardner, P. J., and Carlisle, J., concur.