218 P. 736 | Nev. | 1923
Frank Cudney was informed against, tried, and convicted of having stolen, on the 17th day of May, 1922, a bag of wool weighing 325 pounds, of the value of $104, the personal goods and property of Frank Harmer. The facts are substantially as follows:
On the 17th day of May, 1922, Frank Harmer was engaged in the auto freight business, and had been employed by Joe Sustacho to haul a number of bags of wool from Hennen’s sheep-shearing- corral, in Elko County, into the city of Elko, to be delivered at the Western Pacific depot. When he reached a point on the Elko-Lamoille highway, on the outskirts of the city of Elko, the bag of wool, alleged to have been stolen, fell from his truck. He made no attempt, because of its weight, to replace it, left it in the highway, and went on with his load into Elko, with the intention of returning. When he returned, four or five hours later, to get the bag of wool, he did not' find it. Harmer claimed that the bag bore a brand mark, “Circle H,” stamped on the bag by one of the men who had assisted in loading it upon his truck; that there was a three-cornered tear in the bag, six or seven inches one way and about four inches the other. On cross-examination he testified that the wool belonged to Joe Sustacho, and a partner of his, whose name he did not know. A Mr. Hennen, a witness for the defendant, testified that Joe Sustacho had associated with him in the sheep business Raphael M. Gambo and Frisco Gotea. No owner was called as a witness in the case.
Harmer, upon inquii-yj was informed that a bag of wool had been seen on an automobile, which answered
Upon the trial Cudney offered himself as a witness in his own behalf, and admitted that on the night of the 17th of May, about the hour of 10 o’clock, when in company with his wife and boy, returning from Elko, he saw the bag of wool in the highway, stopped his automobile, examined the bag, withdrew a number of pelts through the tear in the bag, and loaded it on his car and drove home; that at the time he first took the wool he did not see any mark upon the bag or pelts, but after-wards discovered that the bag bore the brand mark “Circle H,” which did not mean anything to him, as it
“Editor Independent — Dear Sir: Will you please insert this ad. in Sat. issue ‘Found one sack of wool on Lamoille road, inquire of Frank Cudney. Owner pay adv.’ I will pay you for this ad. Sat. when I come to town.”
The editor of the newspaper produced on the trial the envelope and letter, showing that the letter was posted in the postoffice at Elko on Máy 19, 3: 30 p. m. Other circumstances were detailed by the witness. Cudney, tending to show his good faith in the matter and that he had no intention of stealing the wool, and that his prosecution was prompted by ill-will and malice on the part of Harmer. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and the court, upon overruling his motion for a new trial, pronounced judgment upon the verdict and sentenced the defendant to state’s prison for a period of not less than two years nor more than fourteen years, where he is now incarcerated. The defendant has appealed from the order denying his motion for a new trial and from the judgment.
When the state had concluded its case in chief, the defendant moved for a directed verdict and dismissal, upon the ground that there was a material variance between the ownership as charged in the information and that proved. The motion was denied. In this.connection the jury was instructed to the effect that, if they believed from the evidence that the bag of wool alleged to have been stolen was the property of Frank Harmer, “or in the possession and under the control of said
From the instruction the court evidently was of opinion that there was not a material variance in the ownership as charged and that proved. Undoubtedly the property was not that of Frank Harmer, as alleged; but the proof shows that he was its lawful custodian and entitled to its possession. As against the defendant this was sufficient. 17 Ruling Case Law, p. 67; 2 Brill, Ency. Crim. Law, sec. 751; 3 Bishop, New Crim. Proc.. (2d ed.), secs. 720, 721; 3 Wharton, Crim. Law (11th ed.), sec. 1170. In a case of robbery (State v. Ah Loi, 5 Nev. 99) it was held that, if the person robbed have a general or special property in, or a right to the possession of, the goods taken, it is sufficient; otherwise, the statute would be defeated. We extend the rule to a case of larceny, and hold that the statute defining larceny would be defeated, if there could be no larceny, except when property is taken from the absolute owner.
“Where an indictment lays the ownership of stolen property in one who is its lawful custodian and entitled to its possession, * * * it is not a fatal variance if the proof shows that the legal title to the property was in some one other than the person in whose possession it was and who had the care and management of it.” Parker v. State, 75 Fla. 741, 78 South. 980, 2 Am. Law. Rep. 350.
The motion for a directed verdict upon the ground of variance was properly overruled, and, while the instruction relating to ownership is crudely drafted, it was not erroneous.
It is urged on behalf of appellant that the court erred in permitting the officers to state what the wife of the defendant said when the search warrant was read to her husband. It is contended that the wife’s statements were not binding upon the defendant and were highly prejudicial. If there was error in their admission, it was cured by the subsequent testimony of the
It is claimed that the defendant was unduly restricted in his cross-examination of the complaining witness, Frank Barmer, in his endeavor to show by the witness that his prosecution of the defendant was the result of ill-will and malice, and without probable cause. On the contrary, we are impressed that counsel for the defendant was permitted to press his privilege to the limit, and it was only when he transcended the legitimate scope of cross-examination that the court called a halt.
The appellant questions the correctness of certain instructions upon the facts necessary to justify a conviction of the finder of lost property of the crime of larceny. No point is made that the property alleged to have been stolen was not actually lost, and the case seems to have been tried upon the assumption that the defendant when he first took the property reasonably supposed it to have been actually lost. The court’s directions to the jury embodied the principles of law applicable to the larceny of property found in the highway, stated generally in the case of State v. Clifford, 14 Nev. 72, 33 Am. Rep. 526, to be as follows:
“When property is found in the highway, and the finder knows the owner, or there be any mark upon it by which the owner may be ascertained, and the finder instead of restoring it converts it to his own use, such conversion will constitute a felonious taking. If there be no notice of the owner at the time of finding, yet if there be a felonious intention to appropriate the property, coupled with a reasonable belief that the owner could be found, it would be larceny. But the finder of lost property who takes possession of it not intending to steal it at the time of the original taking, is not rendered guilty of larceny by any subsequent felonious intention to convert it to his own use.”
It is strongly urged that, under the law applicable to the undisputed facts and circumstances in evidence, the jury was not justified in finding a felonious intent on the part of the defendant. In a case of this kind, the question whether the property was originally taken with a felonious intent is always a question of fact, and usually the principal one, for the jury to determine. In this, as in any other case, the felonious intent may be inferred from the facts and circumstances preceding, attending, and following the finding of the property. Ransom v. State, 22 Conn. 153; Allen v. State, 91 Ala. 19, 8 South. 665, 24 Am. St. Rep. 856; Com. v. Titus, 116 Mass. 42, 17 Am. Rep. 138.
Even though the evidence fails to show that the defendant knew the owner of the bag of wool, and that he had notice at the time he took it by any mark upon it furnishing immediate means of finding who the owner was, still the question of whether the defendant appropriated the wool and converted it to his own use with a felonious intent, coupled with a reasonable belief that the owner could be found, was fairly found against the defendant, and we are in no position to substitute our judgment for that of the jury, if we felt so inclined.
It appears that by a singular oversight the learned and high-minded judge who presided on the trial of this .case gave an instruction in violation of section 310 of the criminal practice act (Rev. Laws, 7160), as amended (Stats. 1915, p. 191), which provides that no special instruction shall be given relating exclusively to the testimony of the defendant, or particularly directing the attention of the jury to the defendant’s testimony. No objection was interposed by the defendant to the giving of the instruction, and no advantage is taken
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.