70 P. 1051 | Idaho | 1902
— The appellant, who was the defendant in the trial court, was convicted on December 19, 1901, of the crime of driving about two thousand sheep from Box Elder county, state of Utah, into Oneida county, Idaho. The facts are substantially as follows: Under the quarantine laws of this state (see Laws 1899, p. 452) the governor of Idaho on March 19,1901, issued a quarantine proclamation, the validity of which is not questioned here. The act under which said proclamation was issued was held to be not in contravention of section 8, article 1, or section 2, article 4, of the constitution of the United States, by this court, in State v. Rasmussen, 7 Idaho, 1, 97 Am. St. Rep. 234, 59 Pac. 933, 52 L. R. A. 78, which decision was affirmed by the supreme court of the United States. (State v. Rasmussen, 181 U. S. 198, 21 Sup. Ct. Rep. 594, 45 L. ed. 820.) In said proclamation it was declared that in certain localities (naming them), including Box Elder county, state of Utah, scab was epidemic among sheep, and prohibited sheep which had been held, herded, or ranged within or driven through said infected districts from being brought into this state for a period of forty days from the date of said proclamation. On June 17, 1901, an information was filed in the district court of Oneida county, charging the appellant with the crime of which he was convicted as above stated. The defendant was sentenced to pay a fine of $200. The appellant’s motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal is from the judgment and order denying a new trial.
It is contended by counsel for appellant that the state failed to prove the corpus delicti; that the body of the crime consisted in driving on April 11, 1901, a hand of two thousand sheep, which between March 9, 1901, and April 12th, of that year, had been held, herded, or ranged in Box Elder county, state of Utah, from the latter county into Oneida county, state of Idaho. The state called as its first witness David H. Anderson, who testified: That he was acquainted with the defendant, and on the twelfth day of April, 1901, went from Samaria, Oneida county, this state, to Pocatello valley, with the defendant, to his sheep camp in said valley. The defendant had one band of sheep
That the state in criminal eases must prove the corpus delicti is not questioned, and it is a well-recognized rule that that may be proved by either direct or circumstantial -evidence. It is also a well-recognized rule that the fact that a crime has been committed cannot be proved by the extrajudicial confessions or statements of the prisoner, and that there must be some evidence or corroborating circumstances tending to show that a crime has been committed, aside from such confessions or statements. (People v. Jones, 31 Cal. 566; Wharton’s Criminal Evidence,
Jesse M. Smith was then called and testified as a witness on behalf of the defendant. He testified that he saw the said hand of sheep in Box Elder county, state of Utah, on the fourth day ■of April, 1901, and that a Dr. McBerney and a Mr. Lowe there made an examination of said sheep and made a certain certificate of their examination thereof, which certificate was thereupon offered in evidence, and rejected on an objection by counsel for the state. The witness further testified that said sheep were the property of one L. Parker, who, with many others, including witness, had prior thereto brought a suit in equity in the United States circuit court for the district of Idaho against Thomas G-. Lowe, the state sheep inspector of Idaho, and his deputies. In the bill of complaint in said suit they attack the said quarantine proclamation of the governor of the state of Idaho on the ground that it is an arbitrary and unwarranted exercise of power; that the alleged facts upon which it is claimed to be justified and based are wholly false; that said proclamation and the acts and threatened acts of the defendants are arbitrary assumptions of power, entirely unwarranted, unlawful, and in violation of the constitutional rights of the plaintiffs — and demand a writ of injunction restraining said ■defendants, their deputies, etc., from preventing the sheep of complainants from coming into the state of Idaho. It appears that complainants then had seventy-two thousand five hundred sheep on the border of Idaho, which they were seeking to drive into this staté. Upon a hearing in said circuit court, a writ of injunction was issued on March 30, 1901, and on October 24, 1901, the same was dismissed or discharged by said court on the ground that the said court had no jurisdiction in said case. Said bill of complaint, writ of injunction, and other matters in connection with said suit, were offered in evidence by counsel for defendant, and were rejected by the court as immaterial
Counsel for appellant also contends that the information fails to allege that the act charged therein was committed willfully, unlawfully, knowingly, or with wrongful intent, and for that reason is fatally defective. There is nothing in that contention. It is well settled that an information or indictment charging an offense in the language of the statute is sufficient, and that is essentially true if the offense is a statutory one, and does not require a criminal intent for its commission. (People v. Russell, 81 Cal. 616, 23 Pac. 418; State v. Ellington, 4 Idaho, 529, 43 Pac. 60; People v. Butler, 1 Idaho, 231.) The information sufficiently charges the offense therein mentioned.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed. Costs are awarded to the state.