80 P. 391 | Ariz. | 1905
The appellant was indicted for the offense of robbery alleged to have been committed on one John C. Murray on the sixth day of March, 1904. The indictment charged that the defendant ‘£ did then and there willfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and forcibly take from the person of one John C. Murray one gold coin ... of the denomination of five dollars.” After arraignment and plea of not guilty, the case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict of guilty. A motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial was presented, argued, and denied, and the judgment of the court was pronounced, sentencing the defendant to imprisonment in the territorial prison for the term of five years. From the denial of the motion and the judgment of the court, the defendant has appealed.
The motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial was based upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and evidence. The court properly instructed the jury upon the essential elements of the crime of robbery, and the necessity of force or intimidation to constitute the offense. The court said: “Robbery is the felonious taking of personal property in the possesion of another, from his person or immediate presence and against his will, accomplished by means
The record discloses no evidence whatever to support the charge of force or intimidation in the taking of the money. It appears that both the prosecuting witness and the defendant had been drinking on the night of the alleged robbery ; that they had been sitting together in a saloon, and the defendant, sitting by the side of- the prosecuting witness, who was playing cards, was seen to put his hand into the prosecuting witness’s pocket on different occasions. They afterwards went out from the saloon to the street, and later in the night were arrested and placed in jail. After their arrest a five-dollar gold piece, fifty cents in silver with some small coins, were found on the person of the defendant. No one was present with them at the time of the alleged offense, and the testimony of the prosecuting witness contains the only statement of the particular facts and circumstances of the offense. He states that he was drunk, and had been drunk, all the evening. “I lost my reason partly in the evening. I know that in the morning — that is, some time during the night — I was over across the alley from the Turf Saloon, in that alley, and I felt somebody come up behind me and run their hands in my pocket, and then run off. That was the first recollection I had in sis or seven hours. After that . . . I threw my hat over my shoulders and started after him, and, as I did, the officer nailed me, and I was then within about twenty feet of him. ... I don’t remember going out of the saloon; I remember being in the alley. That is my first recollection. — Q. How long did you stay in the Turf Saloon?
There being no evidence to sustain the verdict or the judgment based thereon, the judgment of the lower court is reversed and the defendant discharged.
Note. — As to what force is sufficient to constitute robbery, see note to Jones v. Commonwealth, (Ry.) 57 L. R. A. 432.