38 Colo. 23 | Colo. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the „ court:
Separate informations were filed against each of the defendants,, one charging them with having feloniously and burglariously broken and entered the shop and storehouse of The W. P. White Mercantile Company, a corporation, etc., with intent to commit larceny, and another charging them with having, on the same day, feloniously stolen, taken and carried away various articles of personal property, “of the goods, chattels and personal property of The W. F. White Mercantile Company, a corporation under the laws of the state of Colorado.” The cases were consolidated for trial, and the defendants were convicted and sentenced to a term in the penitentiary.
The verdict, upon which the conviction was had, is as follows: -
“State of Colorado, County of Mesa, ss. In the District Court. The People of the State of Colorado vs. George Perry, Warren Perry, Ben Perry and Andrew Perry, defendants.
“We, the jury in the above entitled cause, do find the defendants guilty as charged in the information. We further find the value of the goods and property taken to be the sum of seventy dollars.
“W. W. Wilson, Foreman.”
After the trial and before the filing of the motion for a new trial, the defendant Andrew Perry made an affidavit, in which he said that he alone committed the burglary and larceny complained of.
The second assignment of error relates to the reception of testimony over defendants’ objection. The witness W. F. White was asked if he was president and manager of The W. F. White Mercantile Company on the 21st day of November, 1904. The objection to this question was that, “It does not call for the best evidence, and for the reason that there is no evidence showing that there is such a firm or corporation as The W. F. White Mercantile Company.
The following was propounded to the witness Cropsey:
“Q. I will ask you if oh November '21, 1904, your company was doing business in this county and state as The W. F. White Mercantile Company?” This was objected to because not the best evidence.
The objection to this testimony was properly overruled. In criminal cases it is not necessary to produce the articles of incorporation for the purpose of proving the corporate existence of a concern from which goods are alleged to have been stolen, but the incorporation may be proved by reputation. It is now claimed that there was no proof of the existence of The W. F. White' Mercantile Company, a corporation, alleged in the information as the concern from which the goods were stolen, and that the defendants were entitled to a new trial because of such failure of proof. If the question had been presented to the trial court and an adverse ruling given, we should probably direct a new trial; but nowhere was the point made that it was not shown that The W. F. White Mercantile Company was a corporation. Advantage of this might have been taken by motion to discharge at the close of the people’s case*, by motion for a new trial, or by motion in arrest of judg
Subdivision five of plaintiffs ’ second assignment is as follows:
“In admitting testimony of the witness Cropsey as to tbe existence of tbe corporation of Tbe W. F. "White Mercantile Company, it not being the best evidence.” From this it would seem that counsel was of opinion that the existence of the corporation had been established by secondary evidence. We are of opinion that the testimony did not show the existence of a corporation, or of a concern doing business as a corporation, as required by the decision in Miller v. People, 13 Colo. 168, but as the objection to this testimony was properly overruled, we must hold that there is no merit in plaintiffs’ contention.
Witnesses had testified to having made a search of the premises where the defendants resided, and to having found two overcoats in a creek near their house, a bundle of new socks and a box of cartridges were found in a trunk belonging to one of the defendants, and several rifles were found in a seamless sack buried in .a pile of stone near the house. The rifles were positively identified as the property of The W. F. White Mercantile Company. One of the persons connected with the store testified with reference to the overcoats:
“This overcoat, marked People’s Exhibit J, would be pretty hard to identify. It is one of the stock of overcoats — I mean to say that it is one of a stock from which we missed one that morning. The manufacturer’s tag has been torn off. It does not look to me that it is an overcoat that has been worn. * * * .This overcoat, marked Exhibit K, — we missed an overcoat of that same pattern from our store that morning. I could not say positively that
Another witness, when shown the overcoats, said, when asked if they belonged to the store: “I believe they came from there.”
This, we think, was a sufficient identification to have submitted the question to the jury.
One of the witnesses said: “My attention was called to a place that day where the overcoats were found.’.’ The defendants’ counsel objected: “For the reason that no overcoats are charged in the information.” The district attorney then said: “I want to show what the defendants did. I am not going to identify the overcoats.” The objection was then overruled. The objection was properly overruled. The information charged that two overcoats had been stolen by the defendants. Moreover, they were identified with sufficient certainty to have submitted the question of their ownership to the jury.
The testimony showed that certain articles were missed from the store of The White Mercantile Company. Many articles of the same kind were found concealed on or near the ranch of the defendants. Certain of the articles were positively identified as being the property of the mercantile company; other articles could not be positively identified. We think it was for the jury to determine, from all the facts and circumstances, whether the property found on the ranch of the defendants had been stolen.
The defendants objected to testimony regarding socks found in the trunk of one of the defendants, because the socks had not been identified. We think the objection was properly overruled. The socks were found in a defendant’s trunk. They answered the general description of socks taken, and it was proper for the witness to state- where they were found.
One of the witnesses stated: “I went to the Perry place on the morning of the 29th by request, and before I came there I came in contact with probably a dozen other parties that were on their way, and we proceeded up- Mesa creek canyon and began to search for goods, hides, heads, feet, etc., of animals that were supposed to be there and that should not have been there.” Counsel for defendants objected to the latter part of this- statement, and moved that it be stricken, and the objection and motion were overruled. The witness was told by the district attorney to state, “what you did, without referring to what anybody said”; and in response he made the above statement. Counsel did not state what his objection was, nor state, except in a general way, what
Instructions number 3, 4 and 6 were objected to, and when given exceptions were duly saved. The objection to instruction number 3 is that the court did not “limit the goods exhibited in evidence to the goods alleged and described in the information and alleged to have been taken and stolen, and therefore allows the jury to go outside of the issues involved in this case.” The objection is not well taken. The court admitted in evidence only those goods positively identified and described in the information, and instructed the jury properly as to the “goods alleged to have been stolen and exhibited in evidence.” In instruction number 4 the following sentence is found: “If you believe as men, your oath imposes upon you no obligation to doubt where no doubt would exist if no oath had been administered.” The instruction is one on the subject of reasonable doubt, and the language is in substance that usually employed in such instructions, and has been upheld in many cases. —Instructions to Juries, by Blashfield, § 304.
The objection made to instruction 6 is covered by an instruction given at the request óf the defendants.
It is urged that the verdict should not have been accepted, because it does not state theoffense of which the defendants were found guilty.
“Where two counts of varying grades are propérly contained in an indictment and are of the same
In this case the offenses are of the same grade, and under the decision of this court in Bergdahl v. The People, 27 Colo. 302, the verdict undoubtedly finds the defendants guilty of the crime of larceny. It is therefore unnecessary to determine whether it finds them guilty of burglary.
In support of their motion for a new trial, one of the defendants filed an affidavit, in which he confessed to the burglary of the store and the larceny of the goods alleged in the information to have been stolen, and that he secreted them, but he alleges also that he did so without the knowledge of his brothers, and that his brothers did not in any way advise,' or counsel, or assist him. The other defendants filed affidavits alleging that they had no knowledge whatever of the commission of the offense, and that they did not know that stolen property had been secreted on or near the premises, ,and that they did not know, until after the trial, that the defendant Andrew Perry was guilty of the offense charged. Andrew Perry did not testify at the trial, although the other defendants did. ■
We do not think the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. The reason given by the judge was, among others, that the defendant Andrew Perry was not placed upon the stand, and that counsel probably knew that he had' committed the offense. We shall assume that counsel did not know that the defendant had burglarized the store, but that he presented the motion for a new trial, and the affidavits in support thereof, in good faith. We do not think, however, that the defendants were entitled to a new trial;
Upon a review of the whole record we are satisfied that the defendants have had a. fair and impartial trial, and the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.
Chief Justice Gabbert and Mr. Justice Campbell concur. _