46 Wash. 494 | Wash. | 1907
The appellant was charged, tried, and convicted under an information, the essential part of which is as follows:
“Comes now Geo. H. Rummens, the duly elected, qualified and acting prosecuting attorney for the county of Asotin, [he state of Washington, and by this information complains of and accuses the above-named defendant, the said Louis Eddy, of the crime of horse-stealing, committed as follows, to wit: That he, the said Louis Eddy, in the county of Asotin, the state of Washington, on or about the first day of August, A. D. 1906, then and there being, did then and there unlawfully and feloniously take, steal, and drive away one gelding of the property of the-state of Washington, of value.”
It will be observed that the stolen property is described as the property of the state of Washington. At the trial certain
The information, so far as the matter of ownership is concerned, was drawn with reference to § 6861 of Bal. Code, (P. C. § 2114), which is as follows:
“In prosecutions under the provisions of sections 7113, 7125, 7127, where the owner of the property is unknown, such property shall, for the purpose of this code, be deemed and held to be owned by the state of Washington; and in all cases where the indictment or information alleges the state to be the owner of such property, and the proof on the trial discloses the name of the actual owner, it shall not be deemed a variance, or failure of proof, unless the defendant is the actual owner.”
Appellant contends that the state should have alleged that the ownership was unknown. The statute does not require such an allegation, the existence of the fact of- unknown ownership being sufficient to authorize the averment that the state is the owner. It is further argued that the state did, in fact, know the real ownership, inasmuch as the testimony of its own witnesses tended to show that Schulke was the owner. We think the testimony by no means shows that the state was assuredly advised as to the true ownership. While certain witnesses testified that the animal bore Schulke’s brand, yet the fact was not admitted, and appellant himself testified that the horse was not branded, but that he was a “slick-ear,” an “outlaw,” which, in effect, means that the real ownership was un
The judgment is affirmed.
Mount, Pullerton, Crow, and Root, JJ., concur.