158 Iowa 183 | Iowa | 1913
Though it might have been inferred that defendant was stopping at the Star Boarding House, there was no showing that he occupied room sixty-one when there. The mere fact that a sixteen-inch collar was found in a grip in that room and that defendant wore collars of that size was not alone sufficient to warrant such conclusion.
Another reason for disapproving this instruction is that it declares that the finding of the stolen property in the room occupied by himself and Borsky would afford presumptive evidence of guilt. This is not so unless the jury also found that the two were acting in concert, for the silks were,found in the satchel identified as the one Borsky had had in the store. As these were in Borsky’s recent possession, to render this binding on defendant as furnishing presumptive evidence of guilt against him, it must also have appeared that he was acting in concert with Borsky. People v. Niclosi, 34 Pac. 824; State v. Raymond, 46 Conn, 345; Porter v. People, 31 Colo. 508 (74 Pac. 879); States v. Phelps, 91 Mo. 478 (4 S. W. 119); State v. Wohlman, 34 Mo. 482 (86 Am. Dec. 117).
The requirement of such a finding was omitted from the instruction, and the error in so doing is not obviated by the previous instruction, as contended. Again, the possession is
The court did not caution the jury not to consider the evidence of acts and declarations of Borsky alone in determining whether there was a conspiracy between him and defendant. Whether this omission, in the absence of a request, was error, we need not now determine, but mention the matter that it may not be overlooked on another trial. — Reversed and Remanded. '