101 Neb. 847 | Neb. | 1917
The plaintiff in error, Lemuel Jones, hereinafter called the defendant, was informed against in the district court for Grant county, on the 12th day of May, 1916, and was charged with stealing a gelding in said county on the 26th day of September, 1915, the personal property of one Emery Preston, and of the value of $85. There was a verdict of guilty, and judgment on the verdict, which sentenced the defendant to be imprisoned in the penitentiary at hard labor for not less than one year or more than ten.
It is conceded by the prosecution that the defendant took the horse under an alleged claim of right, but it is denied that he had such right, and, in an ingenious argument, counsel for the state strenuously endeavor to show that the conduct of the defendant was at least questionable and deficient in explanation.
It is immaterial whether the claim of the defendant to the possession of the horse was well founded, as he might think that the horse was his under the arrangement which he claims to have made with Preston, the main witness for the state, and which arrangement is supported by other testimony. The defendant may have had a right to take the horse, even though the jury might justly reach a different conclusion- upon the evidence. In the case tried they were not trying title to the horse. They were trying to ascertain whether the defendant was guilty of the charge made against him. There can be no theft without a felonious intent upon the part of the person charged, and whether there was such intent was the sole question to be determined. The question of the defendant’s guilt should not be made to depend upon Whether he actually owned the horse and was entitled to its possession. The defendant
It is claimed on behalf of the defendant that the evidence fails to support the verdict, and that the question of the defendant’s felonious intent was properly submitted to the jury.
The jury were probably uncertain concerning the guilt of the accused, because they recommended a “light sentence.” The jury are not very likely to do that sort of thing in a county where the chief business is to raise cattle and horses, and where every one perhaps feels the necessity of the protection of such property by severity of punishment. The evidence shows that the defendant needed to raise money to assist his sister in defraying the expenses of their mother’s last illness and of her funeral. He went to a neighbor named Goslin, and the two consulted together as to what was best to be done. Goslin had a horse which he was willing to sell. He authorized the defendant to sell his (Goslin’s) horse for $95, or he was willing to accept the' defendant’s horse in exchange for his horse, provided the defendant succeeded in selling Goslin’s horse and failed to sell his own. Goslin seemed willing to do anything reasonable to help his neighbor out. Goslin turned his horse over to the defendant, and the defendant took the two horses down to Hyannis to meet the horse dealer there, whose name was Preston. Of course, if the defendant had sold his own horse to Preston he could have returned Goslin’s horse to Goslin, or if he had sold Goslin’s horse to Preston he could then have taken his own horse back and delivered it to Goslin. In any event the money which he was to receive, whether for his own horse or for Goslin’s, would be his to use, and there would be no entangling or embarrassing circumstances connected with the transaction. It would then have been a clean deal. Preston insisted on buying both horses, and he put the price at $150 for the two. Preston knew that one of the horses did not belong to the defendant. He testified that Jones so told him, and that Jones “said the man (Goslin) sent him in and he had
When he got back he seems to have gone to see Goslin. He told Goslin he had brought his (Jones’) horse back. Preston went to see Jones. Jones describes his interview with Preston as follows: “He said, 'Good morning,’ and I said, 'Good morning,’ and he said he came for the brown horse, and I said he couldn’t have him unless he settled with Mr. Goslin, and I said, 'Here is your money,’ and he said, 'I bought that horse and I am going to have him.’ ” Preston then seems to have called for White, and he told White that Jones had lied about the horse, and that Jones did not intend to turn him over unless Goslin said so. “He said all he Avanted was to have a Avitness that I wouldn’t turn him over. Q. Did you offer him the money again ? A. Yes, sir; after they got in the automobile and started the engine, but had not started the wheels, I said 'Here is your money.’ ”
Instruction No. 7 reads as follows: “You are instructed that in this case, in order to convict the defendant of the crime charged in the information, you must find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that at the time of taking, said gelding defendant then and there intended to deprive the owner of said property permanently and to convert it to his own use and benefit.” This instruction omits the necessity of finding a felonious intent in order to justify a verdict of guilty, and it authorizes the jury to find the defendant guilty without proof of such intent. Dobson v. State, 61 Neb. 584; Wallace v. State, 91 Neb. 158; Mead v. State, 25 Neb. 444. In Dobson v. State, supra, the court instructed the jury, in substance, that if Dobson took the calf into his possession and sold and delivered the same to Jerry Kelly, with the intention then and there to convert said calf to his own use, and to permanently deprive the owner thereof of said property, then you are instructed that such action would constitute a larceny of said calf. In the syllabus it was said: “An instruction whereby the Avhole case is attempted to be covered, but which omits an essential element, is erroneous, and is not cured by another instruction which covers the point.” In Mead v. State, supra, the instruction said nothing about felonious intent, but did say: “With the intent to permanently deprive the owner thereof of his property.”
When the defendant took the horse he is shoAvn by the evidence to have believed that Preston had authorized him to do so. In that event he could not have had any felonious intent. Mead v. State, 25 Neb. 444; Wallace v. State, 91 Neb. 158; Bartels v. State, 91 Neb. 575.
We have carefully examined instructions Nos. 5 and 8, and the argument of counsel for the state concerning them. No. 5 makes the guilt to depend upon the “intent of permanently converting it (the property) to a use other than that of the owner.” No. 8 devotes five typewritten lines to “asportation or carrying aAvay,” and says that the tak
Preston, in the presence of Dent, seems to have told Jones that he (Jones) could go out to Rangers Station and take one of the horses, leaving the money with the old man in charge. Jones and Dent so testified, and even Preston admits there was talk about Jones taking back one of the horses. Jones caught one of the horses and took it in the presence of Jackson. While he did not leave the money, as he alleges because there was no one there to receive it, he has since been trying to pay it to Preston, who refuses to accept it. When Preston Avent to Jones’ house the horse was there, and Jones and his brother promptly said so. Jones did not try to run the horse out of the country, nor is it shoAvn that he tried to sell it, or otherwise dispose of it. Neither did he slink away or try to conceal himself, and Avhen Preston talked of arresting him, and charged him with being a thief and became somewhat obtrusive, Jones met him more than half way, and Preston appears to have thought he was compelled to defend himself by the use of a board Avhich he held up in front of him as a guard against Jones’ threatened attack. Because of the giving of the above instruction, and because the evidence wholly fails to establish a felonious intent on the part of the defendant, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.