5 Utah 525 | Utah | 1888
The defendant was accused by indictment in the first district court of the crime of grand larceny, and convicted. The indictment charged that the crime was committed by taking from Alma H. Winn, during the trial of the case of Bullion, Beck and Champion Mining Company v. Eureka Hill Mining Company, 11 of his books, containing a phonographic report of the testimony of witnesses examined on the trial. It appears from the evidence in the record that the loss of the notes necessitated the retaking of the
It is urged that the court erred in adopting a wrong-standard of value on the trial, and that the true standard
The appellant insists that the judgment of the lower court should be reversed because one of the counsel for the people, in the statement of the case to the jury, said: “The testimony of Pyne and Giblin as to the fact of the conversation having occurred between Giblin and the defendant, with reference to the loss of these notes, on that Saturday, stands here unexplained; and it was in the power of the defendant, if no such thing occurred, to explain it, and his failure to do it seems to me to make' that testimony conclusive as to the fact of the conversation occurring on that evening in the drug store.” The counsel said, in effect, that the presumption was that the conversation occurred in the drug-store, as stated by the two witnesses, in the absence of evidence to the contrary. He did say that the statement was unexplained, and that it was in the power of the defendant to explain it; but how, counsel did not intimate. He did not refer to the fact that the defendant was a competent witness, and had not testified; and he claimed no inference against him because he had not. He did claim that the presumption was that the witnesses named told the truth. In the absence of explanation, reasonable statements of unimpeached witnesses are presumed- to be true when uncontradicted. In a larceny case, when the evidence shows that the property stolen was found in the possession of the defendant soon after the theft, it would not be error to say to the jury that such possession, without
There was no error in the ruling of the court permitting the witness Turner to testify in regard to a conversation with the defendant. The statements made by the defendant appear to have been voluntary.
We find no error in this record. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.