Dеfendant was convicted on three counts of an indictment charging him with knowingly buying stolen olives in violation of section 496 of the Penal Code. This is *576 an appeal from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.
Defendant operates an olive crushing plant in Butte County where he purchases olives from which he produces olive oil for marketing. It is claimed that on each of the three dates specified in the indictment defendant knowingly purchased olives that had been stolen from nearby orchards by the prosecution witnesses Amos and Larkin. Both of these witnesses admitted theft of the olives' but only Arnos testified to the subsequеnt purchases by defendant. Larkin was not present with.Amos oh any of the three occasions when the purchases assertedly were made. The testimony of Amos and of Larkin is uncertain and contradictory in many respects. Defendant denied ever having purchased the stolen olives and they were nevеr seen at his plant. The employees testified that they had never seen either Amos or Larkin in or about the plant at the time of the purported sales to defendant.
The principal question presented on this appeal is whether the admitted thieves were accomplices of defendаnt as alleged receiver of the stolen property so as to require corroboration of their testimony. The determination of this issue turns on the admission of the thieves that the olive thefts and the subsequent sales to defendant were the result of a prior arrangement or understanding among them. Amos testified thаt the thefts from the D’Amico, Superior and Mitchell orchards, covering the olives involved in the three counts of the indictment, and defendant’s subsequent purchase thereof, were all pursuant to an agreement and understanding he had with defendant in the early part of the olive season wherein defendant agreed to buy all the stolen olives the witness and Larkin could bring in.
It is now settled in this state that the thief and the receiver of stolen property are not accomplices
(People
v.
Burness,
There is, however, a well-established exception to this general rule. The rule and the exception are stated in 2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence 1248-1250, section 741, where it is said that1 ‘ Some contrariety of opinion exists as to whether a thief is to be considered as an accomplice of a defendant charged with receiving stolen propеrty, or vice versa, within the rule requiring corroboration of the testimony of an accomplice. In the majority of the jurisdictions which have passed on the question, the tenor of the decisions is to the effect that such persons are not accomplices of each other. For examplе, in a prosecution for larceny a person who was not present and did not participate in the taking or asportation of the property stolen, or aid or abet therein, but who, subsequent thereto, with guilty knowledge that it was stolen property, aided in the disposition and concealment of the same by transporting it into another county is not an accomplice of the thief. The reason usually advanced for this result, in jurisdictions which hold that the thief and the receiver of stolen goods are not accomplices of each other, is that they are guilty of different crimes, and could not be indicted for the same offense. Following this reason to its logical conclusion then, an exception to this general rule has ensued where the thief and the receiver of stolen property conspire together in a prearranged plan for one to steal and deliver the property tо the other, and pursuant to such plan one does steal and deliver to the other; it is held in this case that the receiver is an accomplice of the thief, and the thief is an accomplice of the receiver. ...” (See also 45 Am.Jur. 402, §17.)
The following eases have recognized this exception tо the rule:
White
v.
State,
When there has been a conspiracy or prearranged plan between the thief and the receiver, the conspirators have been held to be accomplices even where, as is necessary under our statutory definition of accomplices (§1111,
supra),
the test is whether they arе liable to prosecution for the identical offense or offenses. It was held in
Motsenboclcer
v.
State,
In our opinion, reason supports the exception recognized in the cited cases and texts. An accomplice has been defined as one “who knowingly, voluntarily and with common intent with the principal offender unites in the commission of the crime.”
(People
v.
Shaw,
In the recent case of
People
v.
Clapp,
Evidence corroborative of an accomplice must tend directly and immediately to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense.
(People
v.
Shaw,
The evidence that defendant on another occasion had purchased olives from the witness McMullen, wholly fails to connect defendant with the purchases alleged in thе indictment nor does such evidence (denied by defendant) tend to establish that the purchases here involved were, in fact, made. The McMullen boy testified that the olives which he assertedly sold to deféndant had been gathered by him in a dead and abandoned orchard. In view of this they were probably not stolen olives, but assuming that they were,' the
*581
evidence, at the most, discloses a transaction with a different person which was wholly unrelated to the transactions charged in the indictment and was not so inseparately connected that proof of one involved proof of the other. It is settled that if a defendant admits making the purchase for which he is on trial, but denies knowing that the property was stolen, evidence of other purchases by him from the
same
thief is admissible as tending to establish his knowledge of the stolen character of the property or as tending to show common scheme or plan.
(People
v.
De Vaughn,
We conclude, therefore, in the absence of any evidence corroborative of the accomplices and tending to connect defendant with the three purchases alleged in the indictment, that the judgment and order denying a new trial must be reversed. In view of a possible second trial, it is appropriate that we discuss the testimony of the Thelander and Ruiz boys, also relied on as showing other purchases by defendant. These boys testified that they sold stolen olives to Sam Lima, Sr., defendant’s cousin and partner. There is no evidence that defendant had any knowledge of such asserted sales, and Lima, Sr. denied purchasing olives from the The-lander and Ruiz boys. There is no authority for the admission of evidence showing the purchase of stolen property by someone other than the defendant. (45 Am.Jur. 409, § 19.) The testimony of Thelander and Ruiz was not objected to nor was a motion made to strike it out, consequently it may not here be held to have been improperly admitted or prejudicial. But, such evidence having nо connection whatever with the defendant should not be offered or admitted in evidence on a' second trial. A further error disclosed by the record that should be avoided has to do with an instruction charging the jury, among other things, that “it is your duty, to consider whether he [defendant] has been corroborated by othеr credible evidence.” A defendant need not be “eorrobrated” by other evidence, and the jury is free, if it be so minded, to accept his testimony as against any other evidence in the case. Because of the state of the *582 record, however, this error likewise is not available to defendant but it should be avoided on a retrial.
In view of our conclusion that there must be a reversal because of the total absence of evidence corroborative of the accomplices, we need not consider any of the other several contentions urged by defendant upon this appeal.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Schauer, J., concurred.
