Howard v. State

131 P. 1100 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1913

First. It is not claimed that appellant did not have a guilty connection with the stolen property, but it is earnestly contended that the evidence does not sustain a verdict for grand lanceny, but that it makes out a case showing that appellant was merely an accessory to the crime committed, or, at most, that he was guilty of knowingly receiving stolen property. We cannot agree with either of these contentions. Section 2046, Comp. Laws 1909 (Rev. Laws, sec. 2135), with reference to accessories, is as follows:

"All persons who, after the commission of any felony, conceal or aid the offender, with knowledge that he has committed a felony, and with intent that he may avoid or escape from arrest, trial, conviction, or punishment, are accessories."

The testimony in this case clearly shows that when the appellant aided his codefendant, Graham, in escaping from *340 the officers, he was not trying to aid and protect Graham any more than he was trying to aid and protect himself. It is impossible to explain his conduct on this occasion upon any other hypothesis than that he was as much a party to the crime as Graham was. In fact, at this time no charge was pending against either Graham or appellant. Gus Howard was then the only person the officers were after. The conduct of appellant therefore was not prompted by a desire to prevent the arrest of Graham, for no one then wanted to arrest him. His action cannot be considered other than as a tacit confession of his guilt. Therefore the law of accessory does not apply. There is no proof that appellant received the stolen property from Graham, or from any one else. All of the testimony points clearly to the conclusion that appellant and Graham were acting together as copartners in a general plan or scheme of theft. It is true that appellant did attempt to establish an alibi by proving that he was at home on the 14th day of January when the horses and the saddle were stolen, but his evidence on this subject is not different from that which could be produced by any thief on such an occasion, and the force of his testimony on this subject is entirely destroyed by his own conduct when found in possession of the stolen property. The proof is undisputed that appellant was acquainted with Tandy, and had been on Tandy's place in Texas, and claimed to have assisted Tandy in driving a bunch of cattle. There is no proof in the record that Graham was ever on Tandy's place, or ever in the state of Texas. The defense of knowingly receiving stolen property, if applicable to either of these defendants as against this information for larceny, could be made with a much greater showing of reason and justice in favor of Graham than in behalf of appellant. Where there is no question as to the guilt of an appellant, this court does not feel called upon to make nice hair-splitting distinctions as between different offenses. We are far more concerned in the enforcement of substantial justice, the punishment of criminals, and the suppression of crime in Oklahoma, and thereby protecting honest people in their property *341 and rights, than we are in establishing a fine-spun system of criminal jurisprudence.

Second. Over the objection and exception of appellant, the state was permitted to prove that three sets of harness, two saddles, three horses, a cook stove, and some clothing were found at Gus Howard's place in Washita county at the time when the arrest in this case was made, and it was proven without objection that this property was pointed out to the officers as belonging to appellant and his codefendant, Graham. It was also proven that all of this was stolen property. We think that evidence of these contemporaneous thefts and the contemporaneous possession of such other stolen property was competent. See Davis v. State,7 Okla. Crim. 322, 123 P. 560. All of this evidence strongly tended to show that a partnership in crime, of which the larceny of the horses in question was a part, existed between appellant and Graham.

Third. The evidence shows that as a matter of fact the horses and saddle were stolen in Roberts county, Tex., and were brought into Washita county, Okla., while the information alleges that the property was stolen in Washita county, Okla. This was permissible under our statute. Section 2605, Comp. Laws 1909 (Rev. Laws, 2666), is as follows:

"Every person who steals the property of another in any other state or county, and brings the same into this state may be convicted and punished in the same manner as if such larceny had been committed in this state; and such larceny may be charged to have been committed in any town or city into or through which such stolen property has been brought."

Discussing this very question in the case of Bivens v. State,6 Okla. Crim. 629, 120 P. 1037, Judge Doyle said:

"The right of possession, as well as the right of property, remained in the owner all the time as a matter of law, if the original taking and transportation of the property was under such circumstances as constituted a larceny."

The instructions in this case are open to criticism; but, owing to the conclusive character of the testimony, appellant could not have been injured thereby, for no honest and intelligent jury *342 could come to any other conclusion than that appellant had a guilty connection with the larceny of the property in question. To our minds it is plain that, if appellant was not the original thief, he was a party to the entire transaction, and was sharing in the fruits of the theft, and we are not willing to place a strained construction upon the law in order that Oklahoma may become a refuge or asylum for those who depredate upon the property of the people of an adjoining state. The reversal of this conviction would in our judgment amount to a miscarriage of justice.

The judgment of the lower court is in all things affirmed.

ARMSTRONG, P.J., and DOYLE, J., concur.