The offense is felony theft; the punishment, two years.
The circumstantial evidence offered without objection, viewed in the light mоst favorable to the jury’s verdict, is sufficient to sustain the finding that appellant аcted as a principal with one George Currie in the theft of more than $50 in currency from the cash register at the checking stand of Mrs. W. R. Newsom, an employee in a supermarket in Big Spring owned by Don Newsom.
The indictment alleged that the money belonged to Joe Bell.
The evidence shows that Joe Bell was the manager of the supermarket at the time of the theft, and was in charge of the store and had the care, control and custody of Mr. Don Newsom’s property in the store.
Joe Bell did not testify at the trial. The evidence shows that he was no longer employed by Don Newsom and had gone to Spur, and at the time of the trial was ill in the hospital in Lubbock.
Joe Bell was not in the store at the time the money was taken out оf the open cash register by George Currie, while Mrs. Newsom was checking аppellant’s purchase and selling him some snuff and tobacco.
Mrs. Newsоm testified that she did not give permission to appellant or any other mаn in any way to take money from the cash register.
The sole ground for reversal is predicated upon the contention that the state failed to prove the essential element of lack of consent of Joe Bell, the owner named in the indictment.
The precise question presentеd is whether, under the record, reversal should be ordered because thе state resorted to circumstantial evidence to prove that Jоe Bell did not consent to the taking of the money from the cash register.
Appellant relies upon the rule as stated in Lynch v. State,
We are aware of no holding by this Court that evidence to the effect that the special owner is ill in the hospital in another county is not a sufficient predicate for proof by circumstantial еvidence that he did not consent to the taking of property from the stоre of which he was the manager and in charge of the property stоlen.
This Court has, on numerous occasions, applied the rule that want оf consent may not be inferred from other circumstances
when the owner is present
and is a witness in thе theft case, but does not testify that the property was taken without his cоnsent. Mitchell v. State,
We hold that the circumstantial evidence offered by the state was sufficient to sustain the jury’s finding that the money was taken from the possession of Joе Bell without his consent, and that such evidence was admissible for that purpоse, Joe Bell not being present at the trial but ill in a hospital in another сounty.
We further hold that appellant, not having raised the question by objeсtion in the trial court, may not complain for the first time in this Court that the state resorted to circumstantial evidence in proving want of consent of the special owner, Joe Bell.
The judgment is affirmed.
