The defendant is charged with larceny and receiving. He challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to carry the case to the jury on either count. He was convicted of larceny. Nothing is said in the verdict about the second count. This is tantamount to an acquittal on the charge of receiving.
S. v. Taylor,
The defendant’s demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled. The evidence tends to connect him with the theft and permits the inference that he participated therein as principal.
S. v. Williams,
“Possession of the fruits of crime recently after its commission justifies the inference that the possession is guilty possession, and, though only
prima facie
evidence of guilt, may he of controlling weight unless explained by the circumstances or accounted for in some way consistent with innocence.”
Wilson v. U. S.,
162 H. S., 613,
The only exception of serious import on the record is the one addressed to the following portion of the charge:
“The State, gentlemen of the jury, relies upon a theory or rule of law to the effect that one who is found in possession of property that has recently been stolen is presumed to he guilty of the theft. That is a presumption of fact and not of law. It is one that may be rebutted, and it is strong or weak as the possession is more or less recent after the taking.”
It is conceded that, on the facts presented, authorities may be found seemingly in support of this instruction.
S. v. Riley,
No criterion is to be found in the hooks for ascertaining just what possession is to he regarded as “recent” and therefore of presumptive
*624
evidentiary value.
S. v. McRae,
“Tbe presumption that tbe possessor is tbe thief which arises from tbe possession of stolen goods is a presumption of fact and not of law, and is strong or weak as
the
time elapsing between tbe stealing of tbe goods and tbe finding of them in tbe possession of tbe defendant is short or long. This presumption is to be considered by tbe jury merely as an evidential fact, along with tbe other evidence in tbe case, in determining whether tbe State has carried tbe burden of satisfying tbe jury beyond a reasonable doubt of tbe defendant’s guilt. Tbe duty to offer such explanation of bis possession as is sufficient to raise in the minds of
the
jury a reasonable doubt that be stole tbe property, or tbe burden of establishing a reasonable doubt as to bis guilt, is not placed on tbe defendant, however recent tbe possession by him of tbe stolen goods may have
been”'
— Schenck,
J.,
in
S. v. Baker,
In a number of cases, on tbe facts presented, possession of tbe stolen property is regarded as only a circumstance, without presumptive significance, S
. v. McFalls,
The facts of tbe instant case, it seems to us, bring it more nearly under tbe decision in S. v. Lippard, supra, than any other that we have been able to find or the industry of counsel has discovered. There, on facts quite similar, a charge of like import to tbe one here given, was held to be erroneous. Here, eleven days elapsed between tbe larceny of tbe goods and tbe discovery of a part of them in tbe possession of tbe defendant. True, it is manifest that tbe defendant bad tbe tires six or seven days after tbe larceny and sold two of them to Rom Billings, but tbe *625 circumstances are not such, as to exclude “the intervening agency of others.” S. v. Patterson, supra. There is no evidence as to what became of the tubes, and it does not appear that the defendant ever had possession of the stolen wheels.
The doctrine that there is, or may be, a presumption of guilt from the recent possession of stolen goods is one that should be kept in proper bounds or, in the language of
Lord Hale,
2 Pleas of the Crown, 289, “It must be very warily pressed.”
S. v. Ford,
The case put by Hale, where a horse thief was pursued, finding himself pressed, got down, desiring a man in the road to hold his horse till he returned, and 'the innocent man was taken with the horse, illustrates, the necessity of using caution in convictions founded on presumptive evidence.
S. v. Adams,
Under the record evidence, it appears that the instruction complained of may have weighed too heavily against the defendant.
S. v. Harrington,
New trial.
