118 Cal. 508 | Cal. | 1897
Defendants were convicted of the crime o-f burglary. At the trial there was evidence that on the night of October 30* 1896, a building, the property of one Douglas, was entered
Defendants told the officer who arrested them that they had purchased the goods found in their possession and could prove their assertion, and besought him not to take them to jail; their protestations so far prevailed that he allowed them to go their way—the goods and their wagon and horse being left in his custody—upon their promise to return in the early morning; they did not return then or at all, but were rearrested by the officer, after considerable search, several days later. Defendants urge that evidence of the breach of their parole was improperly allowed by the court. Even if their conduct was not the equiva-. lent of flight from arrest, as defendants argue, still their failure to keep faith with the officer, coupled as it was with abandonment of the property, which they claimed to own, in his hands, was a circumstance manifestly proper to be considered by the jury, who might regard it as evincing a consciousness of guilt and as illustrative of the nature of defendants’ claim to the property.
The objections taken upon the failure of the court to give to the jury certain instructions in the precise form requested by defendants have little force. Thus an instruction was asked to the effect that a conviction could not lawfully be had on mere probabilities, but that guilt must be proven “beyond all reasonable doubt”; the court inserted the word “a” in the place of “all,”
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.