Defendant has been found guilty of stealing an automobile. He assigns error in jury instructions on prima facie evidence of guilt, as the phrase is used in the second sentence of section 28-522, R. R. S. 1943. The instructions read in part as follows:
* * the Statutes * * * provide that it shall be unlawful for any person to steal * * * an automobile * * * of any value * * *. The Statutes further provide that the possession of such property without the consent of the owner, and without a certificate of registration issued to the possessor as required by law, shall be prima facie evidence of guilt.” (Instruction No. 4.)
“By a ‘prima facie case’ is meant such a case as would be sufficient to counterbalance the general presumption of innocence and warrant a conviction, if not encountered and controlled or overcome by evidence tending to contradict it and render it improbable, or to prove facts inconsistent with it.” (Instruction No. 9.)
The judicial rule in theft cases ordinarily permits an inference of guilt from an unexplained, exclusive, and fairly recent possession after the theft. Palmer v. State,
The statutory provision does not affect the risk of nonpersuasion. If specific instructions on the inference are given, they ought to dispel any notion that proof of the basic fact shifts the burden of persuasion to defend
*887
ant. A jury may, but is not required to, infer guilt from existence of the basic fact. Palmer v. State,
supra;
United States v. Gainey,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
