Hester v. State

149 Ark. 625 | Ark. | 1921

Hart, J.

Ray Hester prosecutes this appeal to reverse a judgment of conviction against him for the crime of burglary.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in not telling the jury that Bill Woods was an accomplice, and that his testimony required corroboration in order to convict the defendant.

Among the witnesses for the State were Walter Cole, Bill Woods, and Gilbert Spillman. Walter Cole and Gilbert Spillman testified that they, in company with Ray Hester, broke into a mercantile establishment in Para-gould, Greene County, Arkansas, in April, 1920, in the night time and took therefrom silk shirts, silk hose, shoes, underwear, collars and neckties, worth between $2,000 and $3,000.

Walter Cole testified that they hid the goods under a certain house on the night the burglary was committed; that he told Bill Woods about the burglary before the goods were divided; that he also talked with Bill Woods about the burglary- after the goods had been divided; that Bill Woods agreed to help him take his share of the stolen goods to Oklahoma; that they placed the stolen ■goods in grips and that he and Bill Woods started to Oklahoma and were arrested soon after they started, and that Bill Woods had part of the stolen goods in his grip at the time he was arrested.

Bill Woods testified that, in a few days after the burglary was committed, Walter Cole told him that Ray Hester, Gilbert Spillman and himself had committed the burglary; that soon afterward witness asked Ray Hester if they had divided the goods, and Hester replied that they had, and that some one had stolen his part. Witness then agreed with Walter Cole to help him carry his part of the stolen goods to Oklahoma for the purpose of disposing of them. Walter Cole and Bill Woods then started to Oklahoma, each carrying a grip with part of the stolen goods in it. Witness knew that the goods had been stolen at the time the storehouse in question was burglarized in Paragould, Arkansas, and he was going with Cole to Oklahoma to help him dispose of his share of them at the time they were arrested.

The court instructed the jury that Walter Cole and Gilbert Spillman were accomplices of the defendant in the burglary, but refused to instruct them that Bill Woods was also an accomplice, and that there could be no conviction upon his uncorroborated testimony.

This raises the question of whether or not the failure of the court to charge that Bill Woods was an accomplice, and that under the statutes his testimony required corroboration, calls for a reversal of the judgment. The word, “accomplice,” as used in our statute requiring corroboration, has been construed by the court to include an accessory after the fact. Edmondson v. State, 51 Ark. 11, and Stevens v. State, 111 Ark. 299.

But it is insisted by the State that the receiver of stolen goods is not an accomplice of the person committing burglary at the time the goods are stolen. There is a division of the authority in other -States on this question. In Murphy v. State, 130 Ark. 353, the defendant was charged with the crime of ' larceny, and it appeared from the testimony that he had delivered some of the stolen goods to one “C.” This court held that it was the dnty of the court to tell the jury that if “C.” received the stolen goods with knowledge that they were stolen, she was an accomplice, and a conviction could not he had unless her testimony was corroborated in the manner provided in the statute.

In the light of the authorities cited, it follows that Bill Woods was an accomplice of the person committing the burglary, so that the conviction of the one can not be sustained on the uncorroborated testimony of the other. In this case it is not shown that the witness, Bill Woods, participated in the original taking, but it is not questioned that he received a part of the stolen goods, knowing they were stolen, for the purpose of helping dispose of the same. Thus the undisputed evidence places him in the attitude of an accomplice, and it was reversible error on the part of the trial court not to charge the jury on accomplice’s testimony in the manner provided in the statute.

In view of a new trial, it is thought advisable to consider one other alleged error. It pertains to the refusal of the court to permit the mother of the defendant to give certain testimony in support of his defense of an alibi. On the day following the night of the burglary, the father of the defendant came home and reported the fact of the burglary to his family at the dinner table. The defendant offered to prove that his mother at once stated that she was glad the defendant had been at home on the night of the burglary because they could not accuse him of it, as they had done in the Bertig burglary.

It is claimed that this statement made by the mother of the defendant was a part of the res gestae, and should have been admitted in evidence. We do not agree with counsel in this contention. The burglary had been committed on the preceding night and the stolen goods had been hidden. The statement of the mother had no connection whatever with the burglary and could not be said in any manner to be associated with it. It was simply an utterance on her part relative to a past transaction and constituted no part of the res gestae. Elder v. State, 69 Ark. 648, and Spivey v. State, 114 Ark. 267.

The mother of the defendant was permitted to testify that her son was at home on the night the burglary was committed and to give in full her reason for recollecting that he was there on that night. This was as far as she was entitled to go, and the trial court committed no error in refusing the excluded testimony just referred to.

For the error in refusing to tell the jury that the witness, Bill Woods, was an accomplice and charge the jury on an accomplice’s testimony in the manner provided by the statute, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause will be remanded for a new trial.

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