111 S.E. 349 | N.C. | 1922
The defendants were charged with stealing one diamond of the value of $700, the property of M. P. Orr, and for receiving the same knowing it to be stolen. The defendant Kate Hauser was found guilty of larceny of the stone, and Curtis Gentry guilty of receiving the same knowing it to be stolen. Judgment; appeal by both defendants.
The indictment charged the larceny of one diamond of the value of $700, the property of M. P. Orr. The evidence for the State, if believed, is conclusive that Kate Hauser was guilty of larceny of the diamond, which was a large diamond set in the center of a brooch, surrounded by pearls and small diamonds. She stole the brooch and it was later recovered in the same form as stolen. There was no separation of the diamond from the brooch. The defendant's counsel contends, however, that larceny of a diamond being charged in the bill and the proof being that it was set in the brooch, was a fatal variance. If the defendant stole the diamond it makes no difference whether it was attached to the brooch or in a bag or box or lying about loose. S. v. Harris,
The defendant further takes the objection that the indictment charged that the diamond was the property of M. P. Orr, and that it appeared in the evidence that it was the property of his wife; but the two were living together as husband and wife, and he had charge of her affairs and of the property in the house, and therefore had possession with her of her legal effects. He therefore had possession, which was equivalent to a special property therein, notwithstanding that the Constitution recognizes the wife's rights in her individual property. S. v. Wincroft,
The other defendant, Curtis Gentry, besides raising the two questions which are above raised on behalf of Kate Hauser, insisted there was no evidence in the case that he received the diamond knowing it to be stolen; but there was evidence, if believed, from which it appears clearly *823
that Kate Hauser carried the brooch to Curtis Gentry's house. She was a colored nurse, and the testimony is that the brooch (771) was worth about $600. He sold it for $50. The testimony is that she spent the night at his house and the next morning the brooch was missing. Kate Hauser testified that he stole it from her. The conflict in the evidence on this point is not material, for whether he received it to sell for her, knowing it to have been stolen, or stole it from Kate Hauser, he evidently knew that she had obtained the brooch unlawfully, and it could be charged either as her property or as the property of the true owner. Wharton, sec. 1825; Ward v. People, 3 Hill 396, both cited inS. v. Wincroft,
There are some other exceptions, but we do not think that they present questions that require discussion. We have, however, fully examined them, and after hearing the learned argument of the counsel, we find
No error.