Fulton v. State

62 So. 959 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913

THOMAS, J.

— Tbe defendant was convicted on an indictment charging him with buying, receiving, concealing, or aiding in concealing one diamond shirt stud, tbe property of John H. Lewis, knowing it was stolen, and not having tbe intent to restore it to tbe owner. At the conclusion of tbe evidence in tbe case, tbe defendant requested in writing tbe general affirmative charge in his favor, which tbe trial court refused to give. Its action in this particular is tbe sole question presented for our consideration, except tbe motion to establish tbe bill of exceptions, which must be and is granted, since tbe proof is without conflict that tbe bill of exceptions tendered tbe trial judge was correct in all particulars, and that be refused to approve it only because his term of office expired before it was tendered him for signature, which was within tbe time required by law.

In a criminal case, tbe court should never grant tbe affirmative charge for tbe defendant when tbe evidence is of such a character as to overcome, prima facie, tbe presumption of defendant’s innocence. — Jones v. State, 90 Ala. 630, 8 South, 383, 24 Am. St. Rep. 850.

To establish tbe crime, under section 7329 of tbe Code, Avith Avbicb tbe defendant is here charged, it was necessary, of course, to show: (1) That tbe property alleged to have been bought, received, or concealed by defendant Avas in fact stolen property; (2) that defendant either bought it, received it, concealed it, or aided *260in concealing it; (3) that he did so knowing at the time he either bought it, received it, concealed it, or aided in concealing it that it was stolen; (4) and that he did not have the intent to restore it to the owner. — Oddo v. State, 152 Ala. 51, 44 South. 646; Booker v. State, 151 Ala. 98, 44 South. 56; Anderson v. State, 130 Ala. 126, 30 South. 375; Sellers v. State, 49 Ala. 357; Holt v. State, 86 Ala. 599, 5 South. 793.

In this case we are of opinion, after a careful review, that there is evidence tending to support, by fair and reasonable inferences to be drawn from it, every material ingredient of the offense, and that the trial court would not have been justified in giving the affirmative charge for defendant. Defendant admits that he bought the property, but denies that he knew it was stolen. It seems to be the main contention that the evidence is not sufficient to warrant a submission of this question to the jury. Says Judge Stone: “Knowledge of the theft [on the part of the one charged with buying or concealing stolen property] can rarely be the subject of direct proof. Like most other facts, it may be inferred from other sufficient facts and circumstances. In criminal trials, the jury are charged with the ascertainment of the facts, and, in doing so, are permitted to draw all reasonable and satisfactory inferences.” — Collins v. State, 33 Ala. 437, 73 Am. Dec. 426. Says Judge Briokell : “The guilty knowledge, which is an essential element of the offense, is rarely the subject of direct and positive proof. It is inferred from circumstances that are as various as the shapes crime assumes. * * It is the province of the jury to draw the inferences from the facts in evidence, and it must be clear and indisputable that no reasonable inference can be drawn from them, before the court should deny to them *261tbe right of determining the inferences of which the facts are capable.” — Adams v. State, 52 Ala. 381.

In this case, the evidence for the state tends to show that Jesse and Herbert Allison stole the diamond stud in question from the owner, J. H. Lewis, in Birmingham, while he Avas under.the influence of intoxicants or drugs administered by them, or which they induced him to drink; that they later sold the diamond stud, of the value of about |200, to defendant for $40, and left for Nashville, where, a short time after, they were arrested and turned over to Birmingham' officers, to whom they stated that they had, before leaving Birmingham, sold the diamond stud to defendant. Two of such officers went together to see defendant about it. They both testify, in substance, that they told defendant of the arrest and bringing back from Nashville of the Allison boys, who were then in jail in Birmingham, and that they (the Allison boys) claimed that they had sold the diamond stud to defendant, which the officers then demanded that he turn over to them; that the defendant thereupon denied having gotten a diamond stud from the Allison boys, whereupon the' officers required him to go to the jail with them and confront the Allison boys. The two officers differ slightly as to what was said on reaching the jail. One says that he (the officer) asked Allison if he sold defendant a diamond stud, and upon his reply that he had done so, defendant admitted it, hut said he had disposed of it to a drummer on the same night he bought it, and could not therefore produce it; the other officer testified that on reaching the jail the defendant asked Allison, “Did you tell these officers you had sold me a diamond ring?” to Avhich Allison replied, “No, I told them I sold you a diamond stud.” Defendant then said, “Yes; that is true and correct. You did sell me a diamond stud, but *262you have never sold me a diamond ring. I understood them to say ‘ring’ ” — and the defendant further stated that he had, on the same night he bought it, sold the stud to a drummer, and did not know where it could he located. The defendant, in his statement, claims that when the officers mentioned the matter to him they said it was a diamond ring that the Allison boys claimed they had sold him, and that what he denied was that he had bought a diamond ring from the Allison boys; that the officers made no mention of a diamond stud. Even if this be true, though both officers deny it, as shown, it does not much improve defendant’s case. Assuming that the officers did speak of it as a diamond ring, and not as a diamond stud, defendant knew that, although he had not bought a diamond ring from these persons, whom the officers in effect informed him were then in jail as jewelry thieves, he had bought at a sacrifice price a diamond stud from them very recently (only a few days before), which they at the time claimed to defendant, according to his contention, they won in a crap game. It occurs to us that if defendant were as innocent as he contends, and bought this diamond stud from these fellows in good faith, and was not afraid of an explanation as to how he came by it, he would, in the same breath in which he denied to the officers buying á diamond ring from the thieves, have volunteered the information that he had bought a diamond stud from them. He knew that these officers were out after diamond jewelry (whether a ring or stud was immaterial) which these men in jail had disposed of. This was the substance of the matter, and it seems to us that if he was free from guilty knowledge about their transactions, he would not have been so technical in limiting his answer to the exact question asked, but would have, on a mere suggestion, given a full, frank, and free dis*263closure of all be knew. Real innocence is never a stickler, and true honesty never quibbles about mere terms. According to bis own evidence; while be told only the truth, it was not the whole truth. According to the testimony of the officers he told not the truth at all, but expressly, they say, denied buying a diamond stud from the Allison boys, until confronted by them at the jail.

The false denial by a purchaser of stolen goods that he ever bought or received such goods is presumptive evidence of his guilty knowledge. — People v. Levison, 16 Cal. 98, 76 Am. Dec. 505; Huggins v. People, 135 Ill. 243, 25 N. E. 1002, 25 Am. St. Rep. 357; Frank v. State, 67 Miss. 125, 6 South. 842; State v. Miller, 159 Mo. 113, 60 S. W. 67.

But if the denial is the result of a misunderstanding, or of fear of consequences, it will not have that effect.—Sartorious v. State, 24 Miss. 602. Whether it was or not is, of course, a question for the jury, where, as here, the •evidence on that subject is in dispute.

Likewise guilty knowledge may be inferred from the fact that the receiver purchased the goods for very much less than their value. — People v. Levison, supra; People v. Hertz, 105 Cal. 660, 39 Pac. 32; People v. Clausen, 120 Cal. 381, 52 Pac. 658; Huggins v. People, supra; State v. Houston, 29 S. C. 108, 6 S. E. 943; Trail v. State, (Tex. Cr. App.) 57 S. W. 92. Here, the defendant purchased the diamond stud for $40, and it was shown to be worth about $200.

Possession of goods, proved to have been recently stolen, imposes on the possessor the onus of explaining how he came into possession of them; and, if he fail to make a reasonable explanation, it raises a presumption of guilt which will justify the jury in a conviction of such person.- — May. Dig. p. 583.

*264The fact that the purchase from the thief was made openly in the presence of others, and not secretly, even if believed by the jury, is not conclusive that the transaction was an innocent one, or that defendant did not know the property had been stolen. Whether he did or not was still a question for the jury, under all the facts of the case. — Talbert v. State, 121 Ala. 35, 25 South. 690.

We are of opinion that the trial court committed no error in refusing the affirmative charge requested by defendant. — Collins v. State, 33 Ala. 434, 73 Am. Dec. 426; Adams v. State, 52 Ala. 379; Gibbs v. State, 130 Ala. 101, 30 South. 393; Rowland v. State, 140 Ala. 142, 37 South. 245.

The judgment of conviction is therefore affirmed.

Affirmed.