145 S.W.2d 895 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1940
Appellant was convicted of being an accomplice to cattle theft, and sentenced to serve a term of two years in the penitentiary.
It appears from the testimony that appellant entered into a conspiracy with his nephew Eugene Rountree, wherein it was agreed that Eugene would catch a cow on certain premises near the city of Austin, and tie up such cow, and appellant would come and get the cow and sell the same, and give Eugene one-half the money that the cow was sold for. It further appears that Eugene Rountree did rope a cow and tie her up on the roadside near where the cow was kept, and at a later date appellant sold this stolen cow to another.
Under a long line of decisions of this court, the conspiracy contemplating the disposal of such stolen property by one not present at the commission of the offense, the one whose part of the conspiracy was to dispose of the property, and divide the proceeds among the wrongdoers, was a principal and not an accomplice, on the ground that each conspirator is guilty of the acts of any and all the conspirators as long as the purpose of the conspiracy exists and is being carried out to its termination. In the early case of Smith v. State, 21 Texas Ct. App. 125[
The difficulty which confronts us in this case is the fact that the witness Eugene Rountree, after he had reduced the cow to his possession and tied her up on the roadside, was still interested in the animal, according to the proof, owning a half interest in her, or what she "brought," and thus owning a half interest in the stolen cow. The part of the conspiracy wherein the appellant became active was the disposal of the animal and the division of the money received therefor. Under the decisions this constituted him a principal in the theft, and he should have been thus charged in the indictment. We refer to the case of Rountree v. State,
It is observed that the count upon which a conviction was *424 had herein charges appellant as an accomplice while the facts show him to be a principal in the offense.
Because of the failure of the allegation and the proof to correspond, this judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.