Lead Opinion
Aрpellant was convicted of theft of cattle, and prosecutes this appeal.
On the trial his defense was an alibi, and that issue was submitted to the jury in a way that appellant does not complain. The only contention he makes on appeal is that the court erred in failing to charge on circumstantial evidence. On the trial of the case he asked no charge on circumstantial evidence, but did request three other special charges, his first complaint of the failure of the court to so charge the jury, being made in his motion for new trial, and that is the sole ground in the motion. However, under the law at the time оf this trial, appellant had a right to complain in. the motion for new trial of any omission in the charge or failure to charge all the law applicable to the case, and if the error was such as was calculated to injure the rights of the defendant, we should reverse the ease, but in the absence of any requested charge, if the omission in the charge was such as that it was only not calculated to injure his rights, but in fact no injury could occur by reason thereof, then, under the plain letter of the law, we would have no right to reverse. (Art. 743.) So, if by,any construction of the testimony, it should be held that a charge on circumstantial evidence should have been given, yet under the charge of the court as given, such omission would not present reversible error. In addition to relying on his plea of guilty, appellant made a definite, specific defense,—an alibi. That was presented to the jury in a manner frequently approved by this court, and the correctness of such charge is not questioned by appellant. They were required to find such defense untrue heyond a reasonable doubt, or they were instructed to acquit him. And were instructed that before they would be authorized to convict, they must find beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant fraudulently took from the рossession of J. M. Jackson one head of cattle, with the intent to deprive the owner of the value thereof and with the intent to appropriate same to his own use and benefit before they would be authorized to convict him.
Again, appellant testified that John Law had some cattle running in an adjoining pasture, and'while no testimony was offered that any of *170 Law’s cattle had ever gotten in the Matador pasture (the pasture out of which the calf wa? taken), yet the court instructed the jury:
‘Tf you find and believe from the evidence that the one head of cattle alleged to have been stolen in the indictment in this casе was the property of John Law, or if you have a reasonable doubt as to this you will find the defendant not guilty.”
So we would hold, as before stated, if by any construction of the testimony, it could be held that a charge on circumstantial evidence would have been appropriate, yet the failure to so charge would not present reversible error, for every defensive theory was affirmatively presented, and the jury instructed that they must find that he took Jackson’s cattle, beyond a reasonable doubt, or he would not be guilty.
But we do not think a charge on circumstantial evidence was called for under the evidence; however, as our Presiding Judge is of the contrary opinion, and while it may make this opinion rather lengthy, yet we have decided to state a brief synopsis of the testimony. John South-worth testified the Matador-Cattle Company sent him to the pasture to keep a watch for cattle thieves; that in this pasture was a hill, and on Saturday evening, March 16th, he staked his horse under the hill and climbed to the top of the hill, which gave him a view of the surrounding country; that he had a pair of field glasses, and late Saturday even•ing he saw appellant and John Law ride up, pull the staples out of the fence and enter the pasture of the Matador Cattle Comрany; that they separated a yearling calf from the remainder of a bunch of cattle, roped it and drove it out of the Matador pasture and into appellant’s pasture; that they drove it to a certain point in a canyon where they seemed to again rope it. He then left the hill, notified the employes of the Matador Company, instructing them where to meet him, and the sheriff, and then went after the sheriff, returned and carried the sheriff to the point where he claimed he saw appellant and Law rope the calf in the Matador pasture. Tucker, Shaw and Lair joined them at this point, and they traced the сalf’s tracks and horse tracks to the point in the fence where the horses and calf had gone from the Matador pasture into the Ballard pasture, and he says appellant and Law were coming up out of the canyon where he had seen them drive the calf the evening before; that appellant was riding a horse and Law was driving a hack; the testimony shows this hack belonged to appellant; he says appellant and Law, as they came out of the canyon, separated, and he and the sheriff went after them, while the others went to the place where he had seen them drive the yearling calf the еvening before. Those who went to this point say they “found the head and paunch. This beef was not quite a year old. We found the hide. It corresponded all right with the animal,” Southworth says, he “had seen them driving the day before. We found a hide and head and five feet there. The fifth foot was older than the other feet. Four of the feet correspond all right with the hide. The head corresponded all right. The right flank and the right hind leg of the hide was cut off, and part of the right neck was cut off, and the *171 tail was cut off. The Matador Land and Cattle Company’s cattle have a brand on the thigh and on the neck. It is W’ right low down on the thigh. There is a tally mark on the neck. It wоuld have been ‘1’ on that calf. The right hind leg was cut off. That is the part that the ‘V’ was on. The right side of the neck was cut off, that is, the part of the neck that had the brand on it. We never found those two parts, though we searched for them. It was fresh, paunch, feet, head and hide, not more than twelve or fifteen hours since it was killed. It was still warm. The blood on the ground was just beginning to cake a little. . . . There were no ears on there, they had cut the ears off, we searched for the ears and found one. The right ear. The mark of the Matador Land and Cattle Company is crop the right. The ear we found showed crop the right. It was cut in two pieces. Wе never found the other ear.”
It is shown by the record that at the point where Southworth says he saw them drive a yearling out of the Matador pasture to, they found one butchered; that the hide corresponded with the hide of the one appellant and Law drove out of the Matador pasture; that the ears were cut off, but they found an ear near by that fitted the hide; this ear was in the Matador mark; that the points on the hide where the Matador brands were had been cut out of the hide, and the hide cut at no other point. All these facts are shown by the testimony of Tucker, Shaw, Lair in addition to Southworth’s testimony. The sheriff says when he overtook Ballard he told him he had a beef paunch down there and wanted some explanation of it, when Ballard replied: “If you have it you had better stay with it.” The sheriff says he then told appellant he would just take him, when appellant reached for his Winchester rifle. He then offered no other or further explanation. When Law was overtaken in appellant’s hack he had a fresh beef in the hack covered with tow sacks. Many other incriminating facts are shown by the testimony in the record, but we do not deem it necessary to go further into detail. A taking is shown by positive testimony; it is shown by positive testimony that an animal was driven from the Matador pasture to a point in the canyon; it is shown by positive testimony that an animal was butchered at this point; it is shown by positive testimony that the hide of this animal corresponded with the animal taken by appellant and Law out of the Matador pasture; it is shown by positive testimony that this animal was marked in the Matador mark; the brand (if branded) having been cut out; it is shown by positive testimony that appellant and Law were seen to come from this point of the canyon with a beef in their hack. It is also shown by several witnesses that a calf of a Matador cow was missing on Monday morning; the cow ranging at the point where appellant and Law were seen to rope and drive this yearling out of the Matador pasture.
We do not think that under any construction of law this case can be said to be one depending wholly upon circumstantial evidence, especially in the light of this record where there is no testimony that appellant or *172 Law ever had a head of cattle in the Matador pasture, or right to take one out of the Matador pasture. We have read the brief filed by the able counsel for appellant and the cases therein cited, but by reading them it will be seen that the facts in those cases are not similar to the facts in this and the Law еase. With the rules of law as announced in those cases we concur, but the facts in this case do not bring the case 'within those rules. For a long citation of authorities so holding, see Branch’s Criminal Law, section 203, and especially the last paragraph in this section.
The judgment is affirmed.
'Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).—Appellant was charged with stealing an animal the property of J. M. Jackson.
This is a companion case to the case of Law v. State, as to the taking of the animal and the attendant circumstances testified to by the witness Southworth, and the facts are in substance the same. My brethren affirm both cases. I can not concur with their conclusion.
In this casе, however, appellant proved by quite a number of witnesses, among them county officers, that he was in the county seat of the county at the time Southworth says the animal was taken and was not present and had no connection with its taking. Dnder the testimony introduced by the defendant of the officers and other witnesses, including his wife and himself, it was a matter of impossibility that appellant was connected with the taking of the animal about which Southworth testifies. Southworth did not undertake to identify the animal at the time the two men drove it out of the Matador pasture. He simply states he saw them drive a yearling, which the State undertook to show subsequently was the calf of a cow of the Matador Company. If Southworth had testified positively to the identity of the animal taken by these parties, the State’s contention would doubtless be correct, but he did not so testify. I do not care to irrite further myself in regard to it inasmuch as Slessrs. Dalton & Russell and Hon. W. F. Ramsey have filed an able supplemental argument covering the case, and I think they are correct. The argument shows great research of the law and accuracy of conclusion, and I believe correctly presents the law of the case. I, therefore, adopt it is my dissenting opinion in the ease. Their argument is as follows:
“Among the things that we think may be considered as settled is that, in every case depending solely on circumstantial evidence, the court must give such charge and a failure so to do will, if the matter is complained of in motion for new trial, be good ground for reversal. That proposition is as settled and as thoroughly established in the law of this State as the position of the North star is fixed in the heavens. Assuming this to be the rule, let us then see whether the court should have charged on circumstantial evidence in the ease. The theory and con *173 tention of the State is in this wise: Counsel say that appellant was seen driving the yearling in question from the pasture of the Matador Land and Cattle Company, and that the other proof but tended to fix ownership, and, therefore, the case is not one of circumstantial evidence. The fallacy of this reasoning is that it assumes that there was proof of the identity of the animal in question by the witness South worth and that his testimony was to the effect, in substance, that the animal in question was taken from the Matador pasture. Of course, if that were true, we would concede that the case was not one of circumstantial evidence, but the fact is that the testimony of South worth went only to the extent that some yearling was driven Toy appellant and Law from the pasture in questiоn. He was fair enough to state, however, as the court will remember, that the yearling that he saw driven was just like any other yearling raised in that county, with no distinctive marks or nothing to identify it, and there was nothing in his testimony that raises the issue and question as to identity at all or even as to ownership, except the circumstance that a yearling was driven from the Matador Land and Cattle Company pasture. This was, of course, a circumstance of value and importance, 'but it was only a circumstance, since the witness testified that not infrequently cattle belonging to one person would stray into the pasture of another. So that the argument dеstroys itself. The court must remember that appellant was charged with the theft of a certain head of cattle, the property of the person named in the indictment, and, therefore, before it can be said that the testimony is positive there must be positive proof of the identity and ownership of the animal alleged to have been stolen. Since the argument before the bar of this court, we have examined all the cases which counsel for the State alluded to in oral argument, as well as those endorsed on the wrapper. It is our purpose to review these authorities in the light of the record, and also call attention to other cases not referred to in our original brief, some of which, we think, we shall be able to demonstrate, absolutely and conclusively, that we are correct in our position.
“The first case referred to by counsel in oral argument was that of Rogers v. State,
“The next case argued by counsel is that of Nixon v. State,
“The only other case referred to by counsel in argument was that of Taylor v. State,
“The cases cited on the wrapper are those of Hayes v. State, 30 Texas Crim. App., 404; Dobbs v. State,
“How, let us examine the Hayes case, 30 Texas Crim. App., supra. The syllabus, subdivision 2, fairly well states the rule in that case, and is thus stated by the Beporter, Judge Willson: ‘The stolen animal, while running in its accustomed range," strayed into appellant’s pasture, the fence of which was not cattle proof. Defendant knew the animal and also the brand. After the animal had been in his pasture about three months, it was driven up with other cattle defendant intended to ship and placed in his pen. The next morning, one G., who stayed at defendant’s house the night before and was a stranger in the community, went to the pen with defendant, sold the cattle to him for $37, executed *175 a bill of sale for same, and changed the marks and brands of same so as to obliterate the old ones. Held, that the court will not presume that there had been a previous taking by either of the parties and that the conviction did not depend wholly upon circumstantial evidence, and that the court did not err in refusing to charge the law applicable to such evidence. We call attention to the fact that it appears in the opinion of the court (page 47) that ‘appellant testified to the taking of the steers at the pen, but relies upon the purchase from Green to show his innocent connection therewith. Therefore, it is apparent that this case comes within the principle of the rule that where the fact of the taking of property where theft is charged is admitted or shown by positive testimony, and the question of intent is shown by circumstantial evidence, that the court is not required to charge the law of circumstantial evidence/
“The next case is that of Dobbs v. State,
“Now, we respectfully submit that it can not be a matter of substantial controversy or dispute that not one of the decisions discussed by counsel at the bar, or cited by the Assistant Attorney-General, are in conflict with our position, but all of them are, when analyzed, in harmony with our position. Now, then, let us see further the decisions of this court.
“We respectfully submit that the identical questiоn here involved is unequivocal "and squarely decided by this court in the case of Smith v. State, 12 S. W Rep., 869. The opinion in that case is very short and we here copy the whole of it:
“‘The charge of the court was specially excepted to by the defense upon the ground that it did not submit the law with regard to circumstantial evidence. In explaining the bill of exceptions, the learned judge says: “T did not charge as to circumstantial evidence, because the ease did not depend wholly upon that character of evidence.” In this *176 we differ with the learned judge. We concede that there are very strong-proximate circumstаnces going to show that the red roan cow in Spiller’s mark and brand, seen by the witness Bill Wilson when defendant drove and had her put in his field, inside of a week of the time Spiller’s cow was missed, -searched for, and the beef and hide found at defendant’s house was the alleged stolen animal. Still, this witness did not see and identify the hide as of the animal he had seen the defendant drive and have turned into his field. The identity of the animal was wholly an inference to be deduced from circumstances. It is unnecessary to discuss other questions, as they will not arise on' another trial.’
“How, let us reason about this ease and see if the law as there laid down does not fully sustain our сontention. As will be noticed, that case was tried by Judge F. A. Williams, long a member of the Supreme Court of this State. Messrs. Abercrombie & Randolph, among the ablest lawyers who ever lived in Texas, represented Smith. In that case, it was shown that a certain cow was driven and put into the field of appellant, but it is said ‘this witness did not see and identify his hide as of the animal he had seen the defendant drive up and have taken into his field. Therefore, the court says the
identity
of the animal was wholly an inference to be deduced from circumstances.’ Of course, the facts are not given at any length, but -they sufficiently appear to make the question there decided identical with the case here. How, remember, the charge here was theft of a
certain head of cattle,
the' property of the
persen named in the
particular count on which the case was submitted. In order for this not to be a case of circumstantial evidence, it should have appeared from the testimony of some witness or the admission o'f the appellant that this particular animal owned by this particular person had been taken. Is there such evidence ? We answer, no. Southworth, in terms, declined to identify the animal driven from the pasture as an animal belonging to the Matador Land and Cattle Company. It is just as indispensable to show ownership in a charge of theft as it is tо show the possession or taking and that must be proven by some sort of testimony. How did they seek to establish the fact of. the taking of this particular animal ? First, by the testimony of South-worth that
some
yearling was taken from the pasture of the Matador Land Company, and later by circumstances showing mutilation of the hide and otherwise that the animal in fact taken was an animal belonging to the Matador Land and Cattle Company, and, therefore, when learned counsel say to us that there is positive testimony of the taking, we say there is indeed positive testimony
some
animal was "driven from the pasture, but there is no positive testimony that the
identical animal
belonging to the pеrson named in the indictment was at any time ever so driven, and this can only he established by reference to the facts and circumstances of the case. So that', as we believe, the case of Smith v. State is absolutely in point and thoroughly conclusive of the question in controversy. Of course, on so narrow a point as this, it is difficult to find many authorities directly and precisely in point, and our re
*177
searches, which have been thorough and exhaustive, can at most supply the court with such analogies as should be helpful. Among the cases which, as we believe, in principle support our contention, is that of Montgomery v. State,
“We call the attention of the court to the case of Pace v. State,
“We also call the attention of the court to the case of Roebuck v. State,
“We also call attention and invite the court to read the comparatively recent case of Goode v. State,
56
Texas Crim. Rep., 418,
“The case of Felts v. State,
“There will be found in the books a great many cases where the court has passed on the questiоn as to whether or not a charge on circumstantial evidence should have been given. There can be no difference, of course, among lawyers as to the general rule, and we assume that there can be no difference in this court in respect to the general rule, that is, that where a case is solely one of circumstantial evidence, a charge on that character of testimony must be given. On the contrary, it is held universally that where there is positive evidence, either by a witness, in the shape of a confession, by an accomplice, or by admission of defendant in the course of his testimony of the facts constituting the offense, that no charge on circumstantial evidence need be given, although the testimony raised the issue of the lack of fraudulent intent *179 or other defensive matter. Those cases, of course, do not help us much here. It is equally well settled that, where the case is one merely of circumstantial evidence, an instruction such as we complain of the court not giving in this case must he given. Of course, the difficulty lies in determining whether or not this is a case wholly of circumstantial evidence. We believe, on reason, that if the court will carefully think the matter over, there can be little doubt that this is a case of circumstantial evidеnce, and we think beyond the peradventure of a doubt that we are abundantly sustained in this contention by the cases of Smith and Roebuck, supra, that, applying the principle of these cases to the case at bar, it must necessarily result in the court sustaining our contention here. We have examined almost every case in our Reports of recent years on the subject in hand. We have not cited all of them, but we have found none, when carefully analyzed, in conflict with the views here expressed.
“The case of Childens v. State,
The judgment ought to be reversed and the cause remanded.
