40 S.E.2d 699 | N.C. | 1946
Criminal prosecution on indictment charging the defendants, in one count, with the larceny of an automobile, of the value of $700.00, the property of the City of Winston-Salem; and, in a second count, with receiving said automobile, of the value of $700.00, the property of the City of Winston-Salem, knowing it to have been feloniously stolen or taken in violation of G.S.,
The record discloses that on the night of 15 April, 1946, Oscar Morrison, a police officer of the City of Winston-Salem, discovered an automobile on one of the city streets from which a 5-gallon container full of nontax-paid whiskey had just been taken and which had evidently been transported therein contrary to law. He took possession of the automobile, drove it to the city lot and parked it for the night.
The automobile was stolen from the city lot during the night, and there is evidence, circumstantial and presumptive, tending to connect the defendants with its disappearance.
The defendants offered no evidence.
Verdict: Guilty as to each defendant. *104
Judgment: Imprisonment in the State's Prison for not less than 2 nor more than 4 years as to both defendants.
Defendants appeal, assigning errors, and relying chiefly upon their motion to nonsuit. The question for decision is whether there is a fatal variance between the indictment and the proof. Stare decisis would seem to require an affirmative answer.
Conceding that the automobile in question, even if originally the property of one of the defendants, was the subject of larceny while in the custody of the officer who had seized it under authority of law, still it does not follow that its ownership was properly laid in the City of Winston-Salem. The City had no property right in it, special or otherwise. Only the officer who seized the property was authorized to hold it, take and approve bond for its return "to the custody of said officer," and to hold it subject to the orders of the court. G.S., 18-6. A conviction under the present bill would not perforce protect the defendants against another prosecution with the right to the property laid in the seizing officer or in the custody of the law. S. v. Bell,
Usually a fatal variance results, in larceny cases, where title to the property is laid in one person and the proof shows it to be in another. S.v. Jenkins,
The question of variance may be raised by demurrer to the evidence or by motion to nonsuit. "It is based on the assertion, not that there is noproof of a crime having been committed, but that there is none which tends to prove that the particular offense charged in the bill has been committed. In other words, the proof does not fit the allegation, and, therefore, leaves the latter without any evidence to sustain it. It challenges the right of the State to a verdict upon its own showing, and asks that the court, without submitting the case to the jury, decide, as matter of law, that the State has failed in its proof" — Walker, J., in S. v. Gibson,
The present conviction will be set aside, the demurrer to the evidence sustained, and the solicitor allowed to send another bill, if so minded.
Reversed.