The appellants, Walter Brock and Paul Maple, jointly with Joe Miller, were indicted on the charge of having feloniously combined, conspired and
The only error assigned is the overruling of separate motions for a new trial filed by the appellants. The only errors for which each appellant asked a new trial were that the decision was not sustained by sufficient evidence and was contrary to law; and the only defect in the evidence insisted upon or even suggested by counsel for appellants is that it fails to prove the alleged intent on their part “feloniously to take, steal and carry away * * * money of the personal goods of Ralph Temperly.”
Each appellant made a signed statement at the time of his arrest, both of which statements were read in evidence, without objection; and each of them testified at the trial. There was evidence which fairly tended to prove the following facts: That Maple and Brock were mechanics, and lived on different streets with their respective wives, about a mile north of the Union Station in Indianapolis; that Brock had been out of work for five weeks; that Maple hired an automobile from a garage near the court house in Indianapolis; that about five o’clock on the morning of February 19, 1921, he and appellant Brock, with their codefendant, Miller, left a hotel near the Union Station, at which all of them had rooms, and drove south in the hired automobile about a mile and a half to Palmer street, where they turned east from Meridian street into Palmer street; that Ralph Temperly left his home on Palmer street, a square and a half east of Meridian street, and walked west toward Meridian street, intending to. board a street car and ride to the stock yards; that he was a speculator in live stock and had more than $900 in his possession at the time for
Maple testified that when he saw the man run he thought Miller and Brock had stopped to start a fight, or that the man might have thought they were officers. Both Brock and Maple testified that they had been drinking and drove south from the hotel to get some whiskey. Brock said the others asked him to “go on a booze party
' Temperly testified that he had never before met either of the appellants or Miller, and there was no direct evidence that either of them knew Temperly, or knew that he was in the habit of leaving his home at that hour in the morning to go to the stockyards, or that he carried money. All three of the defendants were arrested April 16, 1921, nearly two months after the encounter with Temperly, and each then denied having attempted to “hold him up,” but told the policeman that they agreed “to go out and have a time,” and “all stated that they went out to get some whiskey.”
It is obvious that this evidence would have justified the acquittal of appellants, if the trial court had given credit to their story. But we think the facts that a man accustomed to go from his home to the street car line at 5:30 in the morning, who carried a large sum of money because of the business in which he was engaged, was stopped between his home and the street car line, less than two squares away, by two men that alighted
The judgment is affirmed.