152 Iowa 240 | Iowa | 1911
On a previous trial under the same indictment the defendant was found guilty of the offense charged, but on appeal to this court the conviction was reversed for error' in instructions given. State v. Kimes, 145 Iowa, 346. On that appeal it was held that the evidence was sufficient to sustain a verdict, and, as the evidence for the state on this trial was substantially the same as on the former trial, we need not enter upon a further discussion of its sufficiency. Indeed, it is not now seriously contended for the defendant that the verdict should have been set aside for want of sufficient evidence. The nature of the alleged offense sufficiently appears from the statement and opinion on the former appeal. It is enough now to say that the property alleged to have been stolen by the defendant was a set of double harness* and that the principal portion of the evidence of his guilt related to his being found in possession of the harness after it was stolen without reasonable explanation of such 'possession consistent with his innocence. The alleged errors now necessary to be considered are those relating to the admissibility of evidence and the correctness of the instructions given to the jury.
the right to prove as against him statements made in his testimony on a former trial. Such statements thus proven would not constitute testimony of the defendant on this trial, but were admissible against him on the same ground as that on which any other statements or declarations made in his own interest might be proven against him. State v. Johnson, 72 Iowa, 393; State v. Carroll, 85 Iowa, 1; State v. Van Tassel, 103 Iowa, 6; People v. Arnold, 43 Mich. 303 (5 N. W. 385, 38 Am. St. Rep. 182); State v. Oliver, 55 Kan. 711 (41 Pac. 954) ; State v. Simmons, 78 Kan. 852 (98 Pac. 277).
Aside, however, from the suggestion just made, it is plain that the instruction taken as a whole was not objectionable. If the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence satisfactorily explained defendant’s possession or raised a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jurors as to whether defendant came into the possession of the harness otherwise than by stealing them according to the language of the court, the fact of recent possession was not to be considered in determining defendant’s guilt. The requirement that the explanation of the recent possession must satisfy the jury that it did not arise out of the larceny charged would in itself be erroneous. State v. Manley, 74 Iowa, 561; State v. Miner, 107 Iowa, 656. But the qualification added in the instruction now under consideration brings it into conformity with the rules stated in those cases; or, at any rate, the qualification removes all prejudice from the erroneous statement. It would have been better no doubt to omit the clause relating to “the satisfaction of the jury,” but, read as a whole, the instruction could not have been misleading. Similar criticisms are made to other instructions on the same subject, but they are sufficiently answered by what has been just said relating to the instruction referred to. By none of the instructions given could the jurors have been misled into thinking that the defendant had the burden of satisfying their minds by a preponderance of the evidence that the possession of the stolen property was not the result of the larceny charged; on the contrary, in each of them the jurors were expressly told that only in the event that the evidence failed to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether defendant came into the possession of the harness otherwise than
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.