214 P. 302 | Utah | 1923
Javier Bnrnsco, appellant here, was tried jointly with one Raymond Tharour on a charge of assault with intent to murder. The assault is alleged to have been committed in Grand county January 9, 1921. On application of defendants for a change of venue, the ease was transferred to San-pete county for trial. Tharour was found guilty as charged in the information. He has not appealed. Burusco, the appellant, was found guilty of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to do bodily harm.
On January 7, 1921, two days before the commission of the alleged crime, the defendants brought their herd of sheep to a mesa near the foot of what is called the Book Mountains, in the vicenity of Saleratus Canyon, about 15 miles northeast of Elgin on the Green river. The land there is desert in character and unserveyed public domain. G. A. Harris, the complaining witness, had a cabin on the creek about a mile and a half from where defendants were camped' with their sheep. He came to the cabin on what he called his ranch on the evening of January 7th, and the next morning discovered that the defendants with their sheep were camped on the east side of the canyon. He thereupon went to see the defendant Burusco and told Burusco that he had some cattle in the vicinity and would like appellant to move out and leave the feed for his cattle. Appellant agreed to do so and told Harris that he was desirous of getting to what is known as .Horse Canyon, about three miles to the west, but did not know the best way to go. Harris suggested that he go east to what is known as Crescent creek, where he would find the feed equally as good as where he was encamped. Appellant told Harris that he would ride out that afternoon and examine the proposition, and, if he found conditions as Harris said they were, he would move the next morning. When he inspected the country, he did not find conditions
The principal contention of counsel for appellant is that the evidence presented by the state utterly fails to connect the appellant with the offense charged in the information, or the offense of which he was found guilty, or of any offense.
The only eyewitness on the part of the state was G. A. Harris, • the man who had attempted to interfere with the movement of the sheep herd. His testimony in substance was as follows:
“I was up in the front, and it was narrow there, and I stopped them and they hunched up close; and there was nothing said on either side until we got up to within 40 yards of one another, and I saw them stop, and when they stopped, I stopped the mule and stayed there, and Tharour had a Winchester in his hand, and Bur-usco pulled out an automatic pistol, and he says: ‘Now you go.’ Well, they both had me covered, and there was nothing to do hut go, and I turned my mule around, and I started off, and Burusco shot at me with his pistol. Immediately after he shot, this Raymond Tharour ran right up past Mr. Burusco and dropped down on the side of a rock with his Winchester, and he sat down and raised his Winchester over his knee and fired two shots at me, and the second shot hit the mule in the round part of the hip, high up.”
On cross-examination he testified:
“Q. Now isn’t it a fact, Mr. Harris, that Mr. Burusco didn’t shoot at all? A. No, sir. Q. Did you see him shoot? A. No;*491 hut I heard him shoot; I didn’t see him shoot, hut I heard him shoot. Q. How did you know that he shot? A. I can tell the crack of an automatic pistol from a Winchester. Q. You don’t know whether he shot in the air, or shot hack of him, or shot at you, if he shot at all, do you? A. No; I don’t. Q. All that you know about it, you heard a sound? A. I know that X heard a shot of an automatic pistol. Q. And the shot is different in sound from a Winchester, is that it? A. Yes, sir. Q. An^d that is what you base your conclusion on that Mr. Burusco shot? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that is the only thing is it? A. Yes, sir.”
It will be observed that no claim is made by the prosecuting witness that he saw the appellant shoot. All he testified to is that he heard a sound which he claims was the ‘ ‘ crack of an automatic pistol. ’ ’ The statement in chief that Burusco shot at him with a pistol was nothing more than the conclusion of the prosecuting witness. It was his bald conjecture that appellant fired a pistol with criminal intent. Conceding that it is fairly inferable from the evidence that appellant fired a shot, it was wholly conjectural as to whether he shot at Harris or shot in the air. The prosecuting witness could no more than guess that he was shot at by appellant. Upon this guess the jury must have based the inference that a crime had been committed. This testimony did not prove the body of the crime, nor was it aided by the implied admission made to the former deputy sheriff, Wilcox, who testified that when he asked Burusco after his arrest why he shot at Harris the prisoner replied, “Because he makes me trouble.” If this admission were considered to be an unequivocal confession of guilt, it would, nevertheless, be insufficient to supply the modicum of proof necessary for a conviction, for the reason that an accused cannot be convicted upon a confession without independent proof of the corpus delicti. The record contains no proof of the corpus delicti, and, exclusive of the alleged admission that he shot at Harris, no substantial evidence was produced by the state that the crime of which appellant was convicted was conmitted by any one. The evidence that he pulled out his pistol and ordered Harris to leave is no more than a mere circumstance, and, when considered in connection with the fact that Harris was the aggressor, and that he himself,
“If you find and believe from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants, or either of them, while they were both acting together, did, on or about January 9, 1921, within Grand county, Utah, shoot at one G. A. Harris with a pistol or a rifle or with both of sáid firearms, and that the same are deadly weapons within the definition of that term given in these instructions, and that at the time of the shooting the defendants intended, or either of them intended, to take the life of the said G. A. Harris, then they are guilty of the crime charged in the information, and your verdict should so declare, unless you should further find that they were acting in lawful self defense.”
It is possible, if not probable, that the jurors concluded that appellant and his companion were “both acting together” in driving the sheep. Nothing indicated collusion to commit an assault on Harris, not a scintilla of evidence was produced indicating that defendants had entered into a criminal conspiracy, or that they were acting together in a criminal enterprise, or that any shooting was done in pursuance of a common design. The effect of the instruction was that, if the two were working or acting together in herding or driving the sheep, and one of them shot at Harris with intent to kill, both were guilty of the offense charged in the information. Tharour, the codefendant of appellant, shot at Harris with a rifle and hit the mule upon which Harris was riding. He was convicted of assault with intent to murder. It is apparent that appellant was convicted upon the evidence that was produced against Tharour, though no conspiracy or criminal collusion was shown between him and Burusco.
The instruction as to conspiracy was incomplete and misleading and was without basis in the evidence, and the record contains no evidence supporting the verdict.
The judgment is reversed.