134 P. 623 | Utah | 1913
The defendant was convicted of the larceny of a cow, the property of E. F. Bingham. /ITe appeals. He seeks a reversal on the grounds of insufficiency of evidence and of alleged errors in the admission of certain evidence.
It is alleged that the larceny was committed on the 18th ■ of January, 1912. Bingham’s cow, with other cattle, was on the range. The last he saw of her, as testified to by him, was in July or August, 1911. She then was on the range .and bore his brand. Another witness testified he saw her on the range in September. That, according to the evidence of the state, was the last any one saw the cow. Bing-ham testified he had' raised her; that he had not sold or otherwise disposed of her; that he had looked for her on the range and was unable to find her. Two other witnesses for the state, Smithson and a constable, testified that they were at the defendant’s corral or bam on the 17th or 18th of January, 1912, and there saw five cattle hides and one horse hide; two cattle hides lying on the floor, the rest nailed to the wall. The hides had been taken from the carcasses several months. Smithson claimed the two on the
We think the evidence complained of does not fall within any of the exceptions. Nor do the authorities and cases cited by the state support its contention, except, perhaps, to some extent the cases of Johnson v. State, 148, Ind.. 522, 47 N. E. 926, and State v. Phillips, 160 Mo. 503, 60 S. W. 1050. In the latter the state gave evidence to show that the accused committed the charged offense, the larceny of a cow belonging to one Harris on the 11th of May, and then was permitted to show that nearly a month before that the accused, in the same neighborhood, also stole three other
“Mrs. Nichols’ cattle (the subject of the larceny) were not taken separately hut together with thirteen others, and it was entirely proper to show that the thirteen others were taken from the same corral at the same time, that they were found in the stockyards of St. Francis, and also to show to whom they belonged, not for the purpose of convicting the defendant of different larcenies, but as facts directly connected with the larceny of the cattle belonging to Mrs. Nichols.”
Tbe distinguishing features of that case and this are self-evident. To the same effect are the cited cases of
The case here is different. The defendant was a ranch-man and.cattle man. The finding of hides in his barn or corral was itself not an unusual or suspicious circumstance. The finding in his possession of the hide of the Bingham cow was of course admissible. But that possession and all the circumstances of it could have been shown, the hide exhibited and put in evidence, without showing the possession of, or putting in evidence, the other hides. No evidence was adduced and no claims made that such others, or the animals from which they had been taken, had been stolen or that the defendant wrongfully obtained possession of them, nor that his taking or receiving them- had anything to do or was in any wise connected with, or was a part of, the transaction of the charged larceny. But one of the hides,
Since the judgment, because of these errors, must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial, we find it unnecessary to pass, on the question of insufficiency of the evidence, for no matter how we may decide that question the-case, nevertheless, must be remanded. Furthermore, the verdict and judgment were rendered not only on the competent evidence but on the incompetent and prejudicial evidence as well, but for which the verdict might have been different. To now eliminate the incompetent evidence and determine the question of the sufficiency of the evidence on the competent evidence requires us to pass not on the evidence upon which the verdict was in fact rendered, but on-evidence to support another verdict and to assume that on a retrial the competent evidence will be the same as it was, on this trial.
So the judgment for the reasons given is reversed and the-case remanded for a new trial.