111 S.E. 722 | N.C. | 1922
There were facts in evidence on the part of the State tending to show, among other things, that on 13 June, 1921, the Ford automobile of C. W. Johnson was stolen at the baseball park, in the city of Charlotte, and has never been found or recovered. That some two weeks later the defendant, at the time driving an Essex car, the property of his father, was arrested in the city of Charlotte for speeding, and there was found in the car, covered over with a coat or quilt, a jack, identified as that owned by the prosecutor, and in his car at the time it was stolen. A few days later, at the home of defendant's father, and on a new Ford owned by defendant, there was found a Claxton horn, which was identified by prosecutor as the horn which was on the stolen car at the time it was taken. There were also other inculpating facts, including confused and contradictory statements of defendant as to how he came into possession of these articles. And also much evidence on part of defendant tending to show how he came into possession of these articles, and in a manner consistent with his innocence of the crime charged, etc. In referring to the possession of these articles, identified by the State's evidence as being in or a part of the stolen car, his Honor, among other things, said: "It being a rule of law, gentlemen, that one found in possession of stolen property is presumably the thief — that this is a reasonable presumption of the law that he be the thief, if found in possession of stolen property, and throws the burden upon the defendant to account for his possession." Again, after stating that this is presumption of fact and not of law, shutting off all evidence to the contrary, and that in order to the application of the principle, it must appear that the possession is with the knowledge and concurrence of the defendant, which is correct, the court instructed the jury further that the finding of stolen goods in the possession of the defendant a reasonable time after the theft is committed raises a presumption that he himself is the thief, and it is the law that a person found in possession of goods recently stolen is presumed in law to be the thief, and it is not necessary for the State to show further circumstances tending to prove defendant guilty. And later in the charge, on the subject, the court said: "And *841 again, gentlemen, where a person is found in possession of goods that have been recently stolen, there is a presumption of law that he is guilty of the theft, and it is not necessary, in order to convict him, for the State to show that any other suspicious circumstances accompanied such possession."
The doctrine that there is, or may be, a presumption of guilt from the recent possession of stolen goods is one that, in the (788) language of Chief Justice Hale, must at all times "be warily pressed," approved by Allen, J., in S. v. Ford,
"When goods are stolen, one found in possession so soon thereafter (789) that he could not have reasonably got the possession unless he had stolen them himself, the law presumes he was the thief." And further, the presumption would only arise where the fact of guilty is self-evident from the bare fact of being found in possession of the stolen goods, and otherwise it becomes a case depending on circumstantial evidence to be passed on by the jury. And a like position was upheld in S. v. Anderson, supra, where the fact of possession was only held to be an inculpating circumstance with other facts tending to show guilt, and to be considered and passed upon by the jury without and artificial weight arising from a presumption raised by the law. In the present case, defendant was never found in possession of the stolen car, but of a jack and horn which the State's evidence tended to show had been detached from the same and found in defendant's possession two weeks and more after the alleged theft. These and other inculpating facts are sufficient to carry the case to the jury, but the circumstances presented afforded so many opportunities for defendant to have become possessed of these articles in a manner consistent with his innocence that the artificial weight incident to a presumption raised by the law does not obtain, and for the error indicated, defendant is entitled to a new trial of the issue.
New trial.
Cited: S. v. Reagan,