152 Iowa 394 | Iowa | 1911
The evidence on the trial showed beyond question, and practically by defendant’s admissions in his testimony as a witness, that in the town of Hayes-ville, in Keokuk county, he took the horse and buggy of another and drove away with them, and continued to use them as though they were his own in driving across the
' The contention by his counsel is that he was so intoxicated that he did not know what he was doing when he took the horse, and that the absence of. criminal intent is supported by the general absurdity and incoisistency ’of his entire conduct. The evidence was by no means conclusive, however, that defendant was so far intoxicated when the act was committed that he did not know what he was doing. The men who saw him in Hayesville did not agree in their testimony as to his intoxicated condition. The railroad agent said defendant talked like an intoxicated man, but the two persons with whom he conversed on the street did not notice any such condition. It was a fair question for the jurors to decide, under the evidence, whether, in view of defendant’s condition, he was beyond a reasonable doubt capable of understanding what he did and the natural consequences of his act in taking the property. The verdict was not, therefore, unsupported by the evidence; and yet the proof of intoxication and the absence of a criminal motive was such that there is a serious question in our minds as to whether defendant was actuated by a -criminal purpose. The evidence indicated that defendant made no effort to evade pursuit, though he left Hayesville before dark, and the moon was shining brightly, so he could be easily followed.
Errors are assigned in the refusal of the trial court to give instructions' asked for defendant on the general ■subject of intoxication as bearing upon criminal intent in cases of larceny, and counsel supports -these requested instructions by references to oases in which the very language of the instructions is found. It is not usually practicable to quote, in giving instructions, the language used by courts in other cases in discussing questions of law. Such language is often inapplicable to the facts of the case on trial. The court below did instruct the jury fully as to the bearing of evidence of intoxication on the question of specific intent, and no complaint is made of these instructions.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.