Full opinion text
HAWKINS, J. Conviction is for manufacturing intoxicating liquor, punishment being one year and a day in the penitentiary. Officers of Jefferson county discovered appellant operating a still across a bayou in Hardin county. The prosecution was in Jefferson county. The court told the jury that an offense committed on the boundary of two counties, or within 400 yards thereof, could be prosecuted in either county, (article 190, C. C. P., Rev. 1925), and required them to |ftnd that the offense was committed in Jefferson county or within 400 yards of the boundary. ' No objection was interposed to such instruction. The only question presented here is that .the evidence fails to show that the still was being operated within 400 yards of the county line. No bill of exception in any form presents the complaint. It would be a sufficient answer to refer to article 847, iO. O. P. (Rev. 1925) which requires this court to presume that venue was proven unless an issue was made upon that point in the trial court, which was not done in the present case. See McGlasson v. State, 38 Tex. Cr. R. 351, 43 S. W. 93; Garrett v. State, 61 Tex. Cr. R. 514, 135 S. W. 532. Other authorities are collated in Note 5, under article 847, Vol. 3, Vernon’s Ann. C. C. P. of Texas. If the question had been properly raised in the trial court, the evidence shows without contradiction that the still was being operated within 400 yards of the Jefferson county line. The judgment is affirmed.
On Motion for Rehearing LATTIMORE, J. There is not even a suggestion in the facts of this case that the whisky made by appellant was for any one of the purposes excepted by the statute, and, if the charge of the court was technically incorrect in stating broadly that it was unlawful in this state to manufacture intoxicating liquor, such error was of no possible harm to appellant, and we are forbidden to reverse cases for errors of the charge unless .same were calculated to injure the rights of the accused. See article 666, O. O. P. The proposition that appellant was engaged in the manufacture of intoxi-eating liquor seems riot questioned. The fact that the officers who arrested him were Jefferson county officers, and that appellant was engaged in manufacturing intoxicating liquor within a few yards of the county line, would not render their testimony inadmissible. The motion for rehearing will be overruled. HAWKINS,. J., absent.