109 S.W. 127 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1908
The first count of the indictment charges appellant with having committed a theft of three hundred and forty pounds of brass of the value of $70, and in the second count with having received some three hundred and forty pounds of brass knowing it to have been stolen.
Appellant relies upon one proposition for reversal, to wit: the refusal of the court to charge the jury that it was necessary as a prerequisite to the conviction that the State should prove that the entire amount of three hundred and forty pounds of brass was stolen as alleged, and that if a less amount was shown, a verdict of not guilty should be returned. The cases relied upon to support this contention are Thompson v. State,
The evidence is not very clear in the case at hand that three hundred and forty pounds of brass were taken. If that amount of brass had been taken, the value would have been $54.40. The indictment, however, alleges its value at $70. The evidence leaving the matter somewhat in doubt as to the quantity of brass taken, the jury evidently gave appellant the benefit of the doubt and reduced the punishment to a misdemeanor, having fixed his punishment at six months' confinement in the county jail and a fine of $50. The evidence further shows that the brass was worth 16 cents per pound. As we understand the record, there were several pieces of brass stolen; but there is nothing to indicate, otherwise than it was of uniform value, and the aggregate number of pounds of the different pieces of brass actually taken amounted to the value of less than $50. Nor do we understand that anywhere in the record any evidence shows that the different pieces of brass were of different values. In other words, the testimony shows, with sufficient clearness and accuracy, that it was of uniform value, to wit: sixteen cents per pound.
Under the authority of Moore v. State, supra, and that line of reasoning we are of opinion, the court did not err in refusing the requested instructions, and that this case comes within the rule laid down in the Moore case, supra.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed
[Rehearing denied. — Reporter.] *173