15 Or. 70 | Or. | 1887
The appellants and one George-Simmons were indicted jointly in the Circuit Court of Marion County for the crime of assault and robbery, being armed with a dangerous weapon. They all pleaded not guilty, and on the trial the appellants were convicted and said Simmons was acquitted. From the judgment of conviction entered thereon, this appeal was taken and brought here. The indictment reads as follows :—
“The said Nelson Dilley, George Simmons, and Henry Johns, on the twenty-first day of August, 1886, in the county of Marion, and State of Oregon, then and there being armed with a dangerous weapon, to wit, a pistol loaded with powder and ball, did then and there feloniously commit an assault upon one Ah Sing, with intent if resisted to kill or wound the said Ah Sing, and then and there feloniously took three twenty-dollar gold pieces and one ten-dollar gold piece of the current coin of the United States of America from the person of said Ah Sing, and against his will.”
The following is the section of the statute under which the indictment is drawn:—
“Section 533. If any person being armed with a dangerous weapon shall assault another with intent, if resisted, to kill or wound the person assaulted, and shall rob, steal, or take from the person assaulted, any money or other property which may be the subject of larceny, such person; upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than five nor more than twenty years.”
The indictment follows form No. 10 in the appendix to the Criminal Code, except where it enlarges upon that form, by naming the kind of dangerous weapon used.
On the trial to support the issues on the part of the State, the prosecution offered testimony tending to show that certain horse tracks were found in the vicinity of the scene of the alleged robbery, and were tracked in the direction of where the defendants claim to have been stopping at the time, and also tending to show that a brown horse, belonging to one of the defendants, made tracks similar to those found near the scene of the robbery, and
The appellants’ counsel have alleged a number of grounds of error in the judgment of the court below which we shall not notice, as we regard them entirely untenable.' The main ones are that the indictment is defective in not alleging that the money charged to have been taken was the property of another, and that the court erred in not allowing them to call said Orville Hubbard as above mentioned.
Indictment need not allege ownership. The indictment at common law would have been defective. It would have been necessary under that system to have averred specially to whom the money belonged. The fact that it might have belonged to the robber and not to the person robbed had to be negatived. The presumption was that the person having possession of it owned it, but that did not answer the nicety of the law as it then existed; it had to be affirmatively alleged that it was the property of some one aside from the person who forcibly compelled its surrender to himself. But our statute has dispensed with the necessity of so useless a requirement. It has provided in express terms what shall be a sufficient statement in an indictment for robbery, being armed with a dangerous weapon. (Crim. Code, § 71.) The appellants’ counsel lay a good deal of stress on the qualifiying clause in said section 533, Criminal Code, above set out, containing the words, “ which may be the subject of larceny.” That clause refers to the words preceding it, “ any money or other property”; all that is necessary to determine where one person has taken from another property under the circumstances averred in the indictment herein, is whether it is such an article as might be the subject of larceny. The money of course could have been the subject of larceny, but the counsel contend that in order to have been the subject of larceny it must have been the property of another, which the indictment does not allege. The indictment, however, does allege all that the statute says need be alleged. It seems to me that the counsel have undertaken a difficult task in attempting to establish that an express provision of
Introduction of evidence. The other ground of error, however, is more difficult to surmount. The robbery was committed in an outhouse on said George B. Miller’s farm near Gervais. The house was occupied at the time by five Chinamen, including the said Ah Sing. Three persons were engaged in the commission of the offense, who came to the place upon horseback, and the identity of the said horse tracks with those of the brown horse was a material circumstance in the proof of guilt of the defendants. The prosecution undertook to establish such fact by the testimony of witnesses. The issue so made by the evidence involved not only that the tracks examined were similar to those made by the brown horse, but unlike those made by the roan or any of the other horses found upon the premises. Those witnesses did not state in direct terms, when first upon the stand, that the roan horse was not shod, but certainly that he was not m ust have been implied from what they did say. If the roan horse had no shoes on, that would have
This may appear to be a very refined view of the question, but the objection to the. admission of the testimony was wholly technical. If the evidence offered had been cumulative, as contended by the counsel for the prosecution, the fact of its not having been introduced before was excused. The defendants claimed, and their counsel offered to show, that it had not been discovered until after they rested their case, and I fail to understand why it should have been rejected, if not strictly rebutting proof. The defendants were on trial for a high crime, an offense which subjected them, if established, to severe punish