55 Kan. 674 | Kan. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was charged with the larceny of 16 head of cattle. The information contained six counts. The first one charged the taking of a two-year-old bull and two heifers belonging-to Martha J. Nichols. The other counts charged the larceny of cattle belonging to other parties, alleged to-
Many errors are alleged, but we think none of them require extended notice. After the larceny, and before the filing of the information, Martha J. Nichols married a man named Arnold, and it is said that the information is defective becairse it charges the larceny of the property of Martha J. Nichols. The objection is not good. The information correctly states -the ownership of the property at the time of the larceny. The name, Martha J. Nichols, was indorsed on the information. Objection was made to the examination of Martha J. Arnold as a witness, because her name did not appear on the information. The witness was the same person as the one whose name was indorsed on the information, and the defendant must certainly have known who was intended, and could not have been surprised by the introduction of her testimony, she being the person whose property was charged to have been stolen.
The evidence in the case showed that Mrs. Nichols lived near Bird City; that she, with the aid of her sons, kept a herd of cattle ; that they were placed in a corral at night. There were about 75 head of cattle in the corral. On the night of Saturday, June 11, 1893, the cattle were placed in the corral, which was closed with a wire gate. On the next morning the gate was found open, thrown inside, and all the cattle but 16 head were found out in the oat-field. Mrs. Nichols’s sons, with a neighbor, tracked the missing
We perceive no error in the ruling of the court on the cross-examination of Orbin Boggs, nor in permitting the indorsement of the name of A. Riddle on the information.
The seventh and eighth instructions correctly state the law, and were applicable to the facts.
■ Complaint is also made of the remarks of the county
- A motion for a new trial was made and overruled. This, also, is assigned as error. It is claimed that a preponderance of the evidence is in favor of the innocence rather than the guilt of the defendant, and that the evidence entirely fails to show the larceny of the three cattle charged to have been taken, but shows that there was one bull, one heifer, and one steer, instead of one bull and two heifers, as charged in the information. To sustain a conviction, proof of the larceny of any one of the three animals charged to have been taken is sufficient.
. We have examined the testimony in the case, and find ample and satisfactory evidence supporting the verdict of the jury. The cattle were taken on Saturday night, and were found in the possession of the defendant Sunday night, ready to be shipped out on .a train then about to leave for Omaha. There are many circumstances indicating that the larceny was committed by the defendant, aside from the mere fact that he was found in the possession of the cattle. His story that he bought them of Hanson, and that Han.son delivered them to him a mile and a half up the river, and Hanson’s statement in his deposition that he sold the cattle to Labertew and delivered to him 16 head belonging to Mrs. Sawyer, is not very convincing proof of his innocence. It is possible that Han-non may have had some connection with the larceny,
The judgment is affirmed.