From a conviction of the offense of receiving stolen property, with a sentence of three years in the state penitentiary, Herman Seid appealed.
Two sets of dies of the value of more than $25.00, the property of Southern Trade Schools, Inc., were shown to have been stolen.
James E. Roberts and George Williams, each of the age of 20 years, at first denied their participation in the
The testimony of these two witnesses, in effect, was that they, in company with another, went to the building of the Trade School in the day time and took the dies; that they carried the property to Seid, explained that they had stolen it from the Trade School, and inquired if he would sell it; that Seid replied that he could sell it for about $15.00; and that later he gave them $6.00 or $7.00.
D. B. Ford testified that Seid called him one day to say that a party had left some tools with him for sale and application of the proceeds on his grocery bill, and inquired if the witness was interested in purсhasing them. Later the witness and his cousin examined the dies at Seid’s garage, and Seid accepted the cousin’s offer of $15.00.
It was developed that, follоwing the arrest of Roberts and Williams and some statements by them to the officers, a search of Seid’s premises was made, but it proved to be fruitless. At the time, Capt. Burnley, of the Greenville Police Department, informed Seid that one of the accused boys said that he sold some pipe dies to Seid. Answering this statement, Seid denied that he had seen or purchased any dies, and disclaimed any knowledge of them.
Seid, who had been convicted of a similar crime many yeаrs before, but who, at the time of the trial, was shown by three witnesses to have a good reputation as a law abiding citizen in the community, testified that Roberts traded at his grocery store and was in arrears in his account; that, when he asked Roberts to pay the bill, he brought the dies with instructions to sell and
Over the defendant’s objection, both Roberts and Williams were permitted to testify that, on two or mоre previous occasions, a month or more before their larceny of the dies, they broke into several different places, stole liquor, cigarettes, chewing gum, etc., and, at different times, sold the articles to Seid, who knew that the property had been stolen.
Inasmuch as the weight and worth of the evidеnce and the credibility of the witnesses must be left to the jury, it was not error for the court to refuse the appellant’s requested peremptory instruction to find him not guilty.
But the appellant also contends that the trial court committed reversible error in admitting evidence that he had received stolen property on other previous occasions.
The case of King v. State,
In Raines v. State,
In Keel v. State,
In Clark v. State,
In Bangreen v. State,
The case of May v. State,
In Steele v. State,
There was no connection whatever between the previous purchases of liquor, сigarettes, etc., and the purchase of the dies. They were not interwoven. It was easy to separate them. In point of time, a month or more had elapsed. It was not necessary to receive such evidence in order to show scienter, or guilty knowledge. Both of the state witnesses testified that Seid knеw that the dies had been stolen. This evidence did not come within the exceptions to the general rule against its introduction. It was inadmissible. Besides it was highly prejudicial. Because of this error, the cause must be reversed and remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
