166 Iowa 123 | Iowa | 1914
I. The defendant was tried under an indictment charging him with the crime of larceny from a building. The larceny alleged to have been committed was of seventy-four mink skins or pelts of the value of $303. Upon the trial he was convicted of larceny of property as charged, the jury fixing the value of the stolen property at $72.60. On a former trial of the ease, following a verdict of guilty, appeal was taken to this court, and the judgment of conviction set aside for errors committed upon the trial. 160 Iowa, 138. From a judgment of conviction on the second trial, this appeal is brought.
The evidence introduced on the part of the state tended to show larceny of the property, the presence of the defendant in Tripoli, the place where it was committed, at or near the time of the larceny, the denial of the defendant, upon being arrested, that he had been in Tripoli, and his subsequent admissions of error in the statement, that furs identified as being a part of those stolen were found in his room in Chicago, and others, also identified, were sold by the defendant. The claim of the defendant is that he was not in Tripoli at the time of
II. During the progress of the trial, counsel for the state presented in the presence of the jury for identification by the official reporter Exhibits I and J, being respectively a billy, and a twisted wire handle with a leaden end fashioned as a hammer. Exhibit I was found by the sheriff in the bed which had been occupied by the defendant the day after he had been taken to the penitentiary following his former conviction. While on the way to prison, the appellant had told the sheriff where he could find in a certain place in the jail a case knife which had been fashioned into a saw, and also where he could find a hole in the wall of the jail, cut nearly through it. Upon making search, after his return, the sheriff found the knife and the condition of the wall as stated by the appellant and also the billy. The circumstances under which and the place where Exhibit J was found do not clearly appear in the record. Neither Exhibits I nor J were admitted in evidence, and upon the offer of the former for identification the trial court cautioned the county attorney that it was useless to proceed further in that direction unless it was expected to connect the defendant with it. To this caution reply was made that it was expected to follow it up, and with this assurance the state
III. Exhibit K, the ease knife which had been modeled into a saw, was found at the place where the appellant told the sheriff it had been hidden, not in his cell, but in the toilet
V. On the part of the state, evidence was admitted tending to show that after the arrest of the defendant Panzer, who claimed to be the owner of the stolen furs, a man from Galena
VI. The state offered in evidence the record of the conviction of one William Clark in 1894, in the criminal court of Cook county, Ill., on the charge of breaking and entering
VII. We have carefully considered the record in this case. The evidence is of such nature and weight as to fully warrant the finding of the jury. While the zeal of the prosecuting attorney at times led him close to the border line of prejudicial action, the trial court rigidly held to the rules intended to protect the defendant in having a fair trial, and by its rulings and cautions we think so guarded his rights as to have assured to him a fair trial without prejudicial error in the record.
The judgment of conviction is — Affirmed.