165 Ind. 397 | Ind. | 1905
Appellant was charged in the lower court with the crime of grand larceny committed at Jackson county, Indiana, on February 28, 1905, by then and there feloniously stealing a certain mare, of the value of $50, of the personal goods of William E. Grigsby. Upon his plea of not guilty he was tried by the court and found guilty of the offense as charged, and over his motion for a new trial, assigning only the statutory grounds, judgment was rendered sentencing him to be fined, disfranchised and imprisoned in the state prison under the indeterminate sentence law. Erom this judgment he appeals to this court, and has assigned that the trial court err'ed in denying his motion for a new trial.
Dr. Warner upon the trial testified that in the conversation which he had with appellant he was in no manner repsenting Grigsby, the owner of the mare, nor was he acting as his agent. He appears to have drafted the mortgage and note in controversy, which appellant, as it appears, delivered to Grigsby to secure the hire of the mare. In doing so the doctor testified he was merely accommodating appellant. After the latter obtained the possession of the mare, as herein shown, he did not return to Orothersville, and appears to have gone" to Remington, a town in the northern part of this State, at which place, about five weeks after the time he came into possession of the mare, he was arrested on the charge in .controversy by Harry Rodenberg, an officer. He voluntarily admitted to this officer after his arrest that he did not have possession of the mare very long, and in the same conversation he said he could not tell where she was, or what had been done with her, but that “other parties” had the animal. On being questioned by the officer in respect to these “other parties” appellant would not state who they were. He claimed, however, that the mare had been taken from him in “broad daylight,” and that when he became conscious that she had been taken he left the road upon which he was traveling, kept out of the way of all persons until night, and then walked all night. The officer said to him that he at least might tell where he had left the animal. In response to this request he said that to tell might not do him any good. He admitted that, after going to Remington, he went under the name of Wilson, instead of his true name, for the reason that he did not want any person to know where he was, because if his “whereabouts” became known he
There are no explanatory circumstances or reasons in this case tending to show an absence of felonious intent on the. part of appellant wholly to deprive the owner of the property in controversy at the time he obtained the possession thereof; but, upon the contrary, the evidence in the case certainly justifies the inference that at that time he entertained the' felonious intent not to return the property, but wholly to appropriate or convert it to his own use, which, as there is evidence to show, he subsequently did without the consent or knowledge of the owner. This, under the authorities, constituted the crime of larceny- as completely as though the property in dispute had been taken without the knowledge or consent of its owner. It is apparent under all of the circumstances that the transaction of hiring the mare on the part of appellant was merely resorted to with the felonious intent of obtaining possession of her, in order that he might thereby wholly appropriate her to his own use and absolutely deprive her owner of his property. Grunson v. State (1883), 89 Ind. 533, 46 Am. Rep. 178; Fleming v. State (1894), 136 Ind. 149; March v. State (1889), 117 Ind. 547. That the evidence in the case affords this court no grounds for disturbing the judgment of the trial court is fully affirmed and settled by the decision of this court in Lee v. State (1901), 156 Ind. 541.
Appellant’s counsel insists that Stillwell v. State (1900), 155 Ind. 552, is on a parallel with the case at bar. In this insistence counsel is mistaken, for the facts in that appeal may be said to be virtually the reverse of those in this case.
There is no available error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Montgomery, J., did not participate in this decision.