195 Iowa 1059 | Iowa | 1923
I. Defendant was jointly indicted with William Hildebrand and Jacob Lane. The indictment charged that defendant and Hildebrand and Lane,, on or about the 7th day of November,. 1921, in Woodbury County, Iowa, did unlawfully and feloniously bréale and enter the store building at 310 Pierce Street, in Sioux City, with the unlawful and felonious purpose and intent to commit larceny. Defendant, Kennedy, alone was on trial in this case.
On the 7th day of November, 1921, between the hours of 6 and 10 o’clock in the afternoon, the store building located at No. 310 Pierce Street, in Sioux City, owned by August Williges, in which he manufactured and kept. for sale furs and merchandise, was broken into, and about $17,000 or $18,000 worth of furs were taken therefrom. It was the claim of the State that defendant, Albert Kennedy, in company with Jacob Lane and William Hildebrand, went to the store, and that defendant entered the store and proceeded to the back part thereof, and engaged Henry* Williges, the son of the owner of the fur store, and employed therein, in conversation concerning the purchase of a box for the assigned purpose of packing a coat for shipment; that, while Kennedy engaged Henry Williges in conversation, Hildebrand stood in the doorway, holding the door open, and back of him was Lane, standing in the vestibule just outside the door; that. Kennedy and Hildebrand were noticed particularly by Henry Williges and Alice Zehren, another clerk in the store; that, on the trial, Plenry Williges and Alice Zehren were able to and did positively identify Kennedy as the man who had been at the Williges store on November 7, 1921; that,
The evidence showed that, in the afternoon of November 8, 1921, at about 2 o’clock, a man who gave the name of Harold Hemmingway, but who was afterwards identified as Hildebrand, approached Mrs. Clara P. Green, who lived at No. 27 St. Paul Apartments, Idelhart Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota, and rented from her a front apartment, representing that his wife would occupy the apartment with him, and that they were respectable people, and that they were living in Minneapolis at the time, and that he traveled for a silk company; that, between 4 and 5 o’clock in the afternoon of the same day, Hildebrand, having gone out for the alleged purpose of consulting his wife about moving into the apartment, returned, and represented to Mrs. Green that his wife was sick, but that they would come that evening and bccupy the apartment; that, about this time, a large closed car drew up across the street from the apartment, the occupants of the ear blowing the horn in an attempt to attract the attention of Hildebrand; that, about 20 minutes past 9 that same evening, the same car drew up to the apartment, three men .alighted therefrom, carrying sacks, and came down the private driveway to the back entrance of the building, and upstairs to Apartment 9, which Hildebrand had rented that afternoon; that, shortly thereafter, a short woman got out of the car, and went up the front way, and two or three minutes later, another short woman got out and went up the front way, and then Hildebrand got out of the same car, and went up the front way, and the car drove away; that Hildebrand was after-wards, a day or two before the trial, identified by Mrs. Clara P. Green, who rented the apartment to Hildebrand, as the man who rented the apartment; that, about 20 minutes after these people had entered the apartments, Mrs. Clara P. Green went up
The defense interposed by Kennedy was an alibi. The defendant on his own behalf testified that he was not in Sioux
Hildebrand had been tried before the trial of Kennedy, and the trial of Lane had been set to succeed the trial of Kennedy. After the commencement of the trial of Kennedy, the said codefendants, Hildebrand and Lane, were confined in the county jail, located in the courthouse in which this case was being tried. During the trial of this case, which commenced on February 22d, and after the jury had been impaneled and sworn, and opening statement to the jury had been made, and during the night of February 23d, or early in the morning of February 24th, Hildebrand and Lane and four other prisoners escaped from the county jail in which they were confined. The next morning, there was great excitement over the jail delivery, and extra newspapers were printed and circulated in and about the courthouse, containing write-ups and articles about said jail delivery. On the morning of said jail delivery, George G. Yeaman, attorney for the defendant, stated to the trial judge that he did not believe the defendant could get a fair trial under existing conditions, but the trial proceeded, and the cause was submitted to the jury at about 5 o’clock in the afternoon, and the jury returned a verdict the same evening, at 7 o’clock.
Counsel for appellant assign eleven claimed errors which are relied upon for reversal in this ease, which assignments.we will now consider.
IY. In the third assignment of error it is urged that the court erred in admitting in evidence, over objections of defendant, certain hotel register páges. Whether these hotel register pages were properly admitted in evidence depended upon their proper identification by the witness Alfred Pizey. The exhibits were properly identified, and there was, no error in admitting , them.
. It is urged by counsel for appellant that this instruction makes the unexplained possession of the goods recently stolen sufficient to convict, without other evidence to justify the conviction of the defendant of the crime charged. We think the instruction is not subject to such criticism. Immediately after the above quotation, the Same instruction proceeds:
“If such presumption, together with all the other evidence in the case, facts and circumstances shown upon the trial, satisfies you beyond a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt, then you should convict him. But if you are not so satisfied, then you should acquit him.”
VI. Appellant complains of Instruction 8, wherein the court instructed that the possession need not be the sole possession of the defendant, but that, if the stolen property was in the joint possession of the defendant and others, for the use and benefit of the defendant, or for the use and benefit of the defendant and others jointly, then such presumption would arise.
Appellant also complains of Instruction No. 13, wherein the court instructed the jury as to the weight to be given to defendant’s testimony.
Appellant complains of Instruction No. 12, wherein the court instructed as to the defense of alibi.
No instructions were requested on the subjects of these three instructions. They were instructions usually given on these questions, and we find in them no error.
VII. Appellant assigns error- in overruling his motion for a new trial, for the reason that he has not received a fair and impartial ■ trial, and that the verdict is the result of passion and prejudice of the jury, and on the ground of excitement in the court room during the trial, arising on account of the jail delivery and escape of Hildebrand and Lane, who were indicted
Upon a careful examination of the whole record, we believe that defendant had a fair trial; that the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict; and that there is no prejudicial error in the record. The ease is — Affirmed.