1 Blackf. 429 | Ind. | 1826
The indictment contains two counts. The first is a regular charge against Timothy N. Warner for stealing certain goods, and the second charges Samuel Redman, the present plaintiff) Peggy Redman, and Sally Warner, with receiving the said goods, knowing them to be stolen. Redman was arraigned, pleaded not guilty, was convicted, and sentenced to confinement in the state’s prison. On the trial, E, Daily was introduced by the prosecutor as a witness. The defendant objected to her competency, on the ground that her husband, J. Daily, had been originally charged by affidavit, before a justice of the peace, with stealing the goods specified in the indictment, before the defendant was accused of receiving them; that said accusation still existed; that the officers of justice were in pursuit of him; and that the witness had frequently expressed fears that her husband would be taken and convicted of the larceny. The objection to the competency was overruled, and she gave evidence. On her examination, she stated that Timothy N. Warner and another person, whom she refused to name, brought the goods mentioned in the indictment to her place of residence; and in her relation of the concealment and division of the goods, she mentions this other person as being jointly concerned with Warner in the whole transaction, yet conceals his name in such a manner as, the defendant’s counsel supposes, would induce a general belief that that person was her husband. With this is connected another circumstance, that Warner and Daily absconded nearly at the same time. After the verdict, a motion was made for a new trial, on account of the admission of this witness, and also because no evidence was given of the conviction of Warner for stealing the goods.
There is some ambiguity in the books on evidence on the subject of a wife’s giving evidence that may affect her husband, which principally arises from, the use of general expressions; bat
On the other ground for a new trial we are equally clear. The previous conviction of the person who steals the goods, is not required by the act of assembly, in order to maintain-a prosecution against the receiver. Stealing, and receiving stolen goods, are two distinct offences. They are not, by the act of assembly, placed on the footing of principal and accessary. The case of Ross v. The State, Nov. term, 1825, seemed to suppose that stealing and receiving stolen goods were, by the act of assembly, made the same offence
After the motion for a new trial was overruled, a motion was made in arrest of judgment, founded on several objections to the indictment. Some of those objections were that the time, place, and value of the goods &c., were not stated in the second count; ’but these requisites are properly laid in the first count, and referred to in the second, which answers all the purposes of certainty required by law. The point on which the
The judgment is affirmed with costs.
Ante, p. 390.