The defendant was indicted for knowingly marking the-sheep of another, it being alleged in the indictment that-
As to the first ground, the general rule is that a verdict will not be set aside for this reason if the evidence substantially supports it. There must be an absence of evidence against the defendant or a decided preponderance in his favor. People v. Clauson, 2 Utah, 502; People v. Biddlecome, 3 Utah, 208, 2 Pac. Rep. 194. U. S. v. Harris, 5 Utah, 436, 19 Pac. Rep. 197. The verdict must be plainly wrong, and if it be manifestly against the weight of the evidence, it is the duty of the Court to set it aside. The evidence in this case shows that Washburn Chipman had two herds of sheep on the range, in Emery county, in this Territory, numbering together some 4,200 or 4,300 head. The defendant lived in the same county, and was engaged in ranching, and had 50 or 60 head of horses, about 25 head of cattle, and about 268 sheep. Other men had herds of sheep on the range in the same vicinity and county. In
If’it be assumed, however, that the sheep were the. property of Chipman, there was no evidence that the< defendant came by them wrongfully, except that they were found in his possession. If the property had been’ found in the defendant’s possession immediately after the-loss, such possession might have been a circumstance to be ■ taken into consideration by the jury, with other circumstances, in arriving at a conclusion as to the guilt or inno- ■ cence o'f the defendant. But of itself it was not sufficient