12 S.D. 265 | S.D. | 1899
As other questions discussed may not again arise, the sufficiency of all the evidence offered to corroborate the testimony of an accomplice, upon which plaintiff in error was convicted of the crime of burglary, is deemed to be the only point in the case that need be considered. In support of the information charging plaintiff in error as a principal, Grant Skillman, an admitted accomplice, who was present at the commission of the offense, detailed at the trial the particulars of the crime in effect as follows: A short time prior to the date charged, he had a conversation with the accused, who suggested that the witness procure a team at a livery barn in the city of Aberdeen, and drive to “some neighboring town to get a piece of money. ” Pursuant to an arrangement made by the witness with a liveryman on the evening mentioned in the information, a team was tied to a post in front of a jewelery store, near a saloon kept by the accused, in which the witness and other frequenters of the place were at the time drinking. Being notified that his team was in waiting, he and a niau known by the name of James Kearns got into the buggy, and drove directly to Mellette, where by the use of certain tools, they broke into a building occupied and used by Henry Braun both as a residence and retail store, from which they took certain money and several boxes of cigars, which