The defendants were indicted for larceny and receiving stolen goods, knowing them to have been stolen. The jury found the defendant Barber guilty upon the second count (receiving, etc.), and he alone appealed from the judgment pronounced. *Page 521
When the case was called in the Supreme Court, counsel for defendant submitted a motion in arrest of judgment, upon the ground that the verdict was insufficient, being in these words: "Guilty of receiving, knowing the tobacco to have been stolen," and cited and relied upon the case of S. v.Whitaker,
The jury could not have been misled as to the weight to be given to the testimony of an accomplice. The defendant had no just ground to complain of the instruction "that they (the jury) might convict on the unsupported testimony of an accomplice, but that it was dangerous and unsafe to do so; but, if the story of the accomplice, taken with the other facts and circumstances in the case, carry conviction to the minds of the jury, then it is their duty to convict. The jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the defendant before they can convict." S. v.Mitchener,
In S. v. Morrison,
In this case the testimony tended to show that several other defendants, who were convicted of larceny on the first count, had been stealing tobacco from the same owner at various times, and had been disposing of it to the defendant, who knew it had been stolen, at a price much below its market value. The defendant Barber, who alone appeals, was convicted on the second count of receiving. It was within the discretion of the trial judge to determine whether he would compel an election, and his ruling is not reviewable in this Court. S. v. Harris,
Upon an inspection of the whole record we find no sufficient ground for arresting the judgment. It is not clear that the judge who tried the case below intended to waive the objection that the prayer for instructions was offered too late. It does not follow from the fact that he gave a part of the instruction asked and refused other portions of it that he intended to make such a concession.
But we have considered the principal objections to the charge given and to the refusal to give instructions prayed for as if the exception had been well taken. There is
No error.
Cited: S. v. Black,
(716)