113 P. 889 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1910
The defendant was informed against for the crime of grand larceny. Upon his trial he was found guilty as charged, and sentenced to imprisonment for the term of seven years. He prosecutes this appeal from the judgment.
It appears from the record that the property stolen was certain livestock belonging to Miller Lux in the county of Madera, and that this is the second prosecution of defendant arising out of that transaction. The first trial was had in *122 Madera county, and the defendant was convicted, but upon appeal to the district court of appeal of the third district the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. Thereafter the prosecution of defendant in that county was abandoned, and an information was filed against him in Fresno county, on the theory that after he had committed the larceny in Madera county he removed the stolen property to the county of Fresno.
The evidence in the case shows that the defendant neither took nor assisted in the taking of the property from the possession of the owner, but that subsequent to the perpetration of the larceny he received it, and later sold it to one Rosconi, and was instrumental in transferring it from Madera, where he had kept it, to Fresno county where Rosconi lived. Aside from the possession of property recently stolen (which of itself in this state is not sufficient to justify a conviction) there is nothing in the case to show that the defendant was guilty of grand larceny unless, as claimed by the attorney general, the crime was committed by defendant when he sold the stock to Rosconi. The contention here is, and was the theory of the prosecution in the trial court, that while the defendant in the first instance may have been guilty only of receiving stolen property knowing the same to have been stolen (Pen. Code, sec. 496), when he afterward sold that property to Rosconi, with the intent to defraud Miller Lux of its value, he thereupon became guilty of the crime of grand larceny.
This position we think is untenable, and it was so held on the appeal of the former case. (People v. Disperati,
If there had been evidence in the case legally sufficient to connect the defendant with the original caption of the stock, nevertheless we would be required to hold that the trial court was in error in failing, as it did, to give the jury an instruction embracing the rule of law just discussed. As the case was submitted to the jury, they were certainly led to believe that if the defendant was in the first instance guilty of the offense of having stolen property in his possession, and subsequently, knowing that the stock had been stolen, sold it to Rosconi *124
with the intention to permanently deprive Miller Lux of the same, he was guilty as charged. This, as we have just seen, was improper; and in the former appeal of this case (where, by the way, the prosecution was for stealing stock not all identical with that forming the subject of the present charge, and where possibly the evidence was sufficient to justify a conviction for larceny) the court held that it was error to refuse to give to the jury the following instruction: "The jury is instructed that if you believe that the only part that defendant took in the alleged larceny was that he, after said mules were stolen, aided or assisted the person who stole them in selling or disposing of them, or participated in the profits thereof, then he cannot be convicted of grand larceny, and in such case you will acquit the defendant." In reference to this instruction the court said that as it stated a correct principle of law, and there was evidence to which it would apply, it should have been given. In People v. Del Cerro,
Receiving stolen property is not one of the crimes for which a person may be tried in any county to which the receiver thereof removes the same (Pen. Code, sec. 786); and unless there is something in the statement of defendant's counsel that prosecutions for stealing stock from Miller Lux have become obnoxious to the citizens of Madera county, we are *125
at a loss to understand why the defendant was not prosecuted for receiving stolen property as was suggested in the opinion in the former case. (People v. Disperati,
The judgment is reversed.
Hall, J., and Cooper, P. J., concurred.