47 Wis. 545 | Wis. | 1879
In view of the evidence it was surely not error for the municipal court to refuse to direct the jury to acquit the defendan t. He was charged in the information with feloni-ously stealing arid carrying away six lambs and a sheep, on the 27th day of September, of the value, etc., property of William McKay. It is said that there was no evidence given on the trial from which the jury would be warranted in finding that the property was ever stolen. The owner, McKay, testified that he missed from his yard, on the morning of September 28, 1877, six lambs and a wether, of the description given by him. He was sure that he had driven them into his yard the night before, and during the night they were taken away. It seems to us that this was sufficient proof of nonconsent on the part of the owner to the taking and carrying away of the property.
The only reasonable inference that could be drawn from such testimony is, that the taking and carrying away was against the will or without the consent of the owner. In 2 Archbold’s Grim. Pr. and PL, p. 1196, cited by the learned counsel for the defendant, it is said: “ It is, therefore, a very usual way of
It is further objected that there was no sufficient proof produced to identify the property in the possession of ánd sold by the defendant with the property alleged to have been stolen. The owner described the lambs taken from his yard as being a cross between Leicester and cotswold — lorig-wooled sheep; that the lambs came in May; that the wether was a short-wooled, between Leicester and merino; and that the tails of all were trimmed close. ’ This happened precisely to correspond with the description of the property the defendant sold, both as respects the kind and number of lambs and sheep. It seems to us that the evidence as to the identity of the chattels
By the Court. —Judgment affirmed.