190 Iowa 6 | Iowa | 1920
One ground of the sustained motion to direct verdict was that the indictment does not charge any crime known to the statutes of the state, because the indictment was that the car broken into was the railway car of the Northwestern Railway Company, in which goods, wares, merchandise, and valuable
Section 4794 of the Code makes it a felony if one unlawfully break and enter any railroad or express car containing goods, merchandise, or valuable things kept there for use, deposit, or transportation, when such car is sealed or locked. It may be conceded the vitals are unlawful breaking and entering into a locked or sealed car having said contents, and that, therefore, an indictment based on this statute must contain an allegation that the car was sealed or locked. Section 4791 makes it a felony (punished more severely than is a breach of Section 4794), to break or enter a car in which goods, etc., are kept as aforesaid, or to merely enter such car in the nighttime, if breaking and entering, or entering in the nighttime, is done with intent to. commit any public offense. In Section 4794, sealing or locking is essential, but it is not an element in Section 4791. In Section 4794, intent to commit a public offense is not vital. It is vital in Section 4791. This indictment does not charge the presence of lock or seal, and does charge intent to- commit larceny. It seems clear, therefore, that it is based on Section 4791; wherefore, it is not a defect that it omits the allegation that the car-was under seal or lock.
2-a
excluded; must determine whether the direetion. was . proper, had all proper testimony been received. Campbell v. Park, 128 Iowa 181.
III. The jury could find the following facts: The car had not been broken between 6 and 7 in the evening of the day on which it arrived in Des Moines. A day later, and between 6 and 9 in the evening, it was discovered that the seal on the car was broken. The discovery was made by witness Brothers, who had known defendant for some time. After Brothers had resealed the car, he left, and returned between 8 and 9 o’clock in the evening. He heard a bicycle rattling on the hard road, about 10 or 10:30. It stopped. He saw the shadow of a man, and went after the man. At this time, it was so dark he couldn’t see who the man was. He jumped into his machine, and passed the man. He knew who it was when he passed him; that the two got under a light, so the witness could be sure. On being called on to stop, the man did stop, and under the light. In a word, if the jury believed this witness, he saw defendant under the light; the latter was then riding the bicycle Exhibit 1; and, as already indicated, the jury could believe, on the testimony of Woolf alone, to say nothing of the testimony of others, that said bicycle belonged to defendant. A 100-pound sack of sugar, bearing the same brand as the sugar in the car, and stolen from it, was in the carrier of the bicycle. Defendant jumped from the bicycle, and abandoned it and the sugar, and Brothers took both to the special agent’s house. When Brothers “hollered” to defendant to stop, he let the wheel go, and ran away, abandoning both wheel and sugar. Brothers immediately made search and inquiry for defendant, and was unable to find him. He disappeared, at least for a time, and never returned to his work with the Northwestern Railroad.
Grant the jury could have found that the seal was broken 24 hours before Brothers discovered the breaking. We think it
Be all that as it may, defendant was found with the stolen property in the nighttime. Under the statute which is the foundation of this indictment, defendant might be convicted if he entered the car already broken, with intent to steal, although someone other than he had done the breaking.
We hold the court erred in directing an acquittal. As we cannot affect the defendant, we so hold, merely to settle the law, so that cases with the evidence in the state shown by this record will be submitted to the jury. — Reversed,