88 Neb. 411 | Neb. | 1911
The defendant in the court below, who is plaintiff in error here, was convicted in the district court for Cherry county of the crime of stealing cattle and was sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary. He has brought the case here for review.
1. The first objection made by the defendant is that the court refused to require the prosecuting attorney to elect upon which count of the information he would proceed. One count of the information charged the defendant with stealing cattle and another count charged him with receiving the cattle, knowing that they had been stolen. Larceny and receiving stolen property are generally supposed to be so connected Avith the same transaction ■ as not to require' an election. 1 Bishop, New Criminal Procedure (4th ed.) sec. 457. Section 419 of our criminal code so provides. That section is as follows: “An indictment for larceny may contain also a count for obtaining the same property by false pretenses, or a count for embezzlement thereof, and for receiving or concealing the same property, knowing it to have been stolen; and the jury may convict of either offense, and may find all or any
2. It is also insisted in the hriefs that immediately before this case was called for trial another prosecution for cattle stealing had been tried with a verdict of not guilty, and that the court had reprimanded the jury with remarks tending strongly to prejudice any defendant that might be put upon trial thereafter upon such a charge before members of the same jury or other jurors who had heard the court’s language. There is no evidence in the record of any such transaction except certain affidavits of the defendant in which some alleged facts and some conclusions are recited. The facts set forth in this affidavit are not sufficient to support the argument now made upon this point. The record of the trial discloses no prejudice upon the part of the court against the defendant’s case, and no such action on the part of the court will be admitted unless clearly shown by the proof.
3. In September or the first part of October, 1909, eight or nine head of cattle were missed from the range of one Carter, in Cherry county, the property of one Byron. The Carter range embraced several sections of land and contained something over 1,000 head of cattle, and among these cattle were 25 or 30 head belonging to the said Byron. In the month of March following,.these missing cattle were seen by Mr. Carter in the inclosure of this defendant, about 25 or 30 miles from the range upon which they had been kept. It was thereupon arranged with the county attorney and the sheriff that a Mr. Hyde should go to the place of the defendant and attempt to buy the cattle in question, which was done. Mr. Hyde testified that at first the defendant, who had 25 or 30 head of cattle, declined to sell any, but afterwards informed Mr. Hyde that he had some cattle with “off brands” which he would sell. Mr. Hyde had represented to the defendant that he was trying to buy a few cattle for a friend of his in Keya Paha county, and finally succeeded in purchasing the cattle in
These cattle had been openly in the possession of the defendant for about six months. There was therefore little, if any, presumption of guilt from the possession of the stolen properly. The defendant testified that he had the money in the house to pay for the cattle, $172. Upon cross-examination he gave the names of men apparently well known in the community from whom lie had recently received the money for property he had sold them. These statements were not contradicted. If the defendant had taken these cattle from the range where they were kept by the owner, or if he had found them after they had escaped
The tenth instruction given by the court is as folloAVs: “The jury are instructed that, where a witness has intentionally testified falsely to a material fact or facts in the trial of a case, then the jury are at liberty to disregard the entire testimony of such witness, except; in so far as the testimony of such Avitness may be corroborated by other substantial testimony or evidence.” This would haAre been applicable to the testimony if the jury believed that the facts Avere as the testimony of the county attorney and the sheriff was intended to show that the defendant’s Avife admitted them to be. So far as Ave have observed, it has no relation to any other testimony in the case. This tends to make the error of receiving the testimony of the county attorney and sheriff in regard to her statements made to them the more dangerous.
5. The court gave an instruction copied-in part from the famous anarchist case which this court has so often disapproved. “The doubt which a juror is allowed to retain on his mind, and under which he should render his verdict of not guilty, must always be a reasonable one. A doubt produced by undue sensibility in the mind of any juror in view of the consequences of his verdict, is not a reasonable doubt. And a juror is not allowed to create sources or material of doubt by resorting to trivial or fanciful suppositions and remote conjectures as to possible states of fact different from that established by the evidence.” The instruction as given is disapproved, and under the circumstances in this case was prejudicial to the defendant.
6. Hearsay evidence was erroneously admitted as to the cattle having been seen at plaintiff’s place; but, as all parties concede that the cattle were there at the time specified, this evidence could not have been prejudicial. The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury to the effect that, unless the “defendant, himself in person,” went to the range or pasture where the cattle were and took and drove them away with the purpose and intention
We do not find any error in the orders of the court complained of in regard to the plea in abatement filed by the defendant relating to the form of complaint before the examining magistrate or relating to the calling of the grand jury. The objection that the indictment contained the words “and the personal property of Thomas Byron,” instead of the words “of the personal property of Thomas Byron,” is immaterial.
The sentence of seven years under the evidence in this case seems severe, but, as there must be a new trial for the errors above indicated, we have refrained from discussing that question.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.