98 Ala. 80 | Ala. | 1893
There is nothing in the present record which tends to explain why the testimony produced on the trial was so meagre. It is reasonable to conjecture that the witnesses had gone beyond the power of the court to reach them with its process. We must deal with the questions as the record presents them.
The indictment charges that defendant “feloniously took and carried away in or from a storehouse four dollars and fifty cents in specie coin of the United States, the denomination and description of which is to the grand jury unknown, .the personal property of Mrs. Mary Knight,” &c. The indictment sufficiently describes the offense, under our statute and forms. — Code of 1886, Vol. 2, § 3789 ; forms No. 51, p. 272. To steal “personal property of any value • • from or in any storehouse,” is made grand larceny, and a felony by our statute — § 3789.
Much of the testimony adduced on the trial consisted of
It results from the foregoing that the court erred in the admission of some of the testimony.
It is certainly true that the guilty, when legally and properly proven to be so, should be punished. It is equally
The offense charged in this case is larceny “in or from a storehouse.” That crime is made a felony under our statute, irrespective of the value of the thing stolen. Now, in every charge of larceny from a storehouse, there is necessarily embraced the simple larceny. The major includes the minor. In the trial of the present case it was competent to acquit the accused of the higher crime — the felony — and convict her of the lesser offense—petit larceny.—Code of 1886, § 4482; Morris v. State, 97 Ala. 82.
We can not on the testimony we have pronounced legal, affirm that there was no testimony tending to show that the money found in the possession of the defendant was the property of Mrs. Knight, and that the defendant had dishonestly come into possession of it. It was not direct nor very full; but its weight was for the jury. Of course they should not convict, unless they are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the money was the property of Mrs. Knight, and that the defendant stole it from her.
As to the higher offense, the felony, there was no testimony that the money had ever been in the storehouse, or that it had been stolen in, or from that place. There was an entire want of proof of the corpus delicti, to constitute the grand, or felonious larceny.
Reversed and remanded.