41 Tex. 1 | Tex. | 1874
The defendant was indicted in the county of Travis; indictment charging that, on the 7th day of February, 1874, the accused, in said county and State, did then and there, in the county of Bastrop, within four hundred yards from the county line of Travis county, unlawfully and fraudulently take from the possession of It. T. Hill, “and out of the dwelling-house occupied by said Hill,” certain moneys belonging to “ W. H. Caldwell, without the consent of the said Hill, the person having possession of said money, and with the intent,” &c., &c.
The jury found the accused guilty, as charged, and assessed his punishment at five years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.
The defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, notice of appeal given, and the case is presented for revision on the following assignments of error: “That the court erred in not instructing the jury that the taking of personal property from the possession of one holding it for another must be a taking without the consent of the person so holding it.” The charge of the court in this respect might have been fuller. The omission in this case is, however, not material; it was not absolutely necessary for the protection of any right which the accused might have. The evidence of W. H. Caldwell, the owner of the money charged to have been stolen, and of E. T. Hill, in whose possession it was at the time of the theft, is positive on this point; both witnesses state they did not give their consent, and the defendant made no proof contradictory of this evidence.
The second assignment, “ that the court erred in in
Mr. Greenleaf, in his treatise on Evidence, vol. 1, p. 152, states the rule as follows: “In matters of public interest all persons must be presumed conversant, on the principle that individuals are presumed to be conversant in their own affairs; and as common rights are naturally talked of in the community, what is thus dropped in conversation may be presumed to be true. It is the prevailing current of assertion that is resorted to as evidence, for it is to this that every member of the community is supposed to be privy and to contribute his share. Evidence of common reputation is, therefore, received in regard to public facts, * * * on ground somewhat similar to that on w7hich public documents not judicial are admitted, namely, the interest which all have in their truth, and the consequent probability that they are true.”
Appellants in their brief contend that the English rule as to common report, or traditionary evidence in proving boundaries, and, as in this case, the boundary line between the counties of Bastrop and Travis, “being handed down by tradition from generation to generation,” was allowed “in accordance with the well-known principle of the law of evidence, that it was the best evidence the nature of the case admitted of;” but that “this doctrine is not applicable to this country, especially to the newest of the American States.” In Noyes v. Ward, 19 Conn. Rep., p. 268, in an action of trespass vi ei armis, where defendant assaulted “the city highway surveyor,” for interference with the land of defendant, the court held that such evidence, to show a moving in of defendant’s fences twenty-one years before, was proper, and say, “Proof of general reputation was admissible in this case for the purpose of showing the existence and extent of the highway in question.”
In Boardman et al. v. The Lessees of Reed and Ford, 6
In Ralston v. Miller, 3 Rand., (Va. Rep.,) p. 44, the question grew out of the location of a building on the corner of a street in the city of Richmond, and the controversy was whether ancient use, and general reputation of that use or occupation, should on the trial outweigh the depositions and survey of a surveyor as to the true line. The court said “ that ancient reputation, and possession were entitled to infinitely more respect in-deciding on the boundaries of the lots than any experimental surveys.” In the American notes to 1 Phillips & Arnold on Evidence, from page 220 to 227, the citations from decisions of the courts of Hew Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Hew York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, Tennessee, and other States show that evidence of hearsay or general reputation to prove boundary lines has been extended quite as far in those States as in the English courts.
Mr. Greenleaf, in his work on Evidence, in a foot-note, pages 167 and 168, says: “The admission of traditionary evidence in cases of boundary occurs more frequently in the Huited States than in England,” and that “the general practice in this country in the admission of traditionary evidence as to boundaries seems to agree with the common law, as stated in the text.”
The boundary lines of Travis and Bastrop were shown by the evidence to be less than four hundred yards from
The 3d assignment of error, “ that the court erred in not granting a new trial, and in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial,” is based on the grounds set out in the motion for a new trial, which are as follows: “The verdict of the jury is contrary to the law as given in the charge of the court. The verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence as adduced on the trial of this cause. The verdict of the jury in assessing the punishment of defendant at five years in the penitentiary is cruel and excessive.”
The first ground for a new trial it is not necessary to consider. The second, that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence, does not appear to be borne out by an examination of the statement of facts in the record.
The defendant was indicted for stealing from the dwelling-house and possession of R.T. Hill, and without his consent, one hundred and sixty dollars, the property of him, I. G. Caldwell. The uncontradicted evidence of the witness proved that the money was in the trunk, and it locked, when the white family went to church in the morning; on their return, in the evening, Mr. Hill, the owner of the trunk, unlocked it, and missed the one hundred and sixty dollars, mostly in silver, of Caldwell’s, and one .hundred and forty dollars in gold and twenty in silver belonging to himself. The witness, Caldwell, learning that defendant had been
It is true, as stated in the brief, that some other person residing in the immediate neighborhood may or might have taken the money; but applying to the evidence in this case the tests which men apply when endeavoring to form a final judgment on any of the important transactions of ordinary life, every conclusion must be that the defendant was guilty as charged in the indictment.
The evidence shows him to have been well acquainted with the premises. Among the keys found on his person is one which unlocked the door of the house; the explanation is that it belonged (from his statement) to his father, and was the door-key of his father’s house. What reason there was for his carrying this key with him while in the employment of E. T. Hill, and why he carried it away to Hempstead, is not shown. It could not be for its value, and it certainly was not for legitimate use. On the day of the theft he makes his visit to the house or premises of Mr. Hill.' And for what purpose did he remain and loiter around the yard for an hour? Here he is found with a key to open the door in his possession, and evidently staying there to find an opportunity to do so unobserved. The trunk containing the money is in the room, and the key to
All the facts and circumstances of this case, when taken together, were sufficient to lead the mind of the jury to
That the verdict is cruel and excessive in assessing the punishment at five years in the penitentiary is not apparent. The jury had the exclusive power to determine the amount of his punishment within the periods declared in the Penal Code; having done so, it is not a matter of revision.
The judgment is • Afeibmed.