The appellant was convicted upon a bill of indictment charging that Earl Miller “... 2 cases of Camel cigarettes, 2 cases of Chesterfield cigarettes of the value of two hundred and five dollars aforesaid, of the goods, chattels and moneys of the said Jake Rendle-man before then feloniously stolen, taken and carried away, feloniously did receive and have . . . the said Earl Miller . . . then and there well knowing said goods, chattels and moneys to have been feloni-ously stolen, taken and carried away, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided.”
*362 Tbe appellant assigns as error tbe following excerpt from tbe charge: “Tbe term ‘knowledge/ gentlemen of tbe jury, is not so limited in its scope as to mean tbat a defendant must know to tbe extent of actually having seen tbe property stolen, but it means, gentlemen of tbe jury, tbat if tbe facts, tbe circumstances and tbe surroundings of tbe transactions at tbe time tbe property is received are sucb as to cause tbe defendant to reasonably believe or hnow tbat tbe property was stolen, tben, gentlemen of tbe jury, tbat would constitute knowledge witbin tbe purview and intent of tbe statute. Using that as a definition, gentlemen of tbe jury, if you shall find and find beyond a reasonable doubt, tbe burden being on tbe State to prove it, tbat tbe defendant, Earl Miller, received cigarettes which bad theretofore been stolen from Jake Eendle-man, tbe prosecuting witness, and you further find beyond a reasonable doubt tbat at tbe time of so doing be knew tbat tbe same bad theretofore been stolen, tben, gentlemen of tbe jury, tbe court instructs you tbat it would be your duty to render a verdict of guilty of receiving stolen property.” We are constrained to sustain this assignment of error.
C. S., 1250, under which tbe bill of indictment was drawn, provides tbat tbe person charged shall receive tbe stolen goods “knowing tbe same to have been feloniously stolen or taken,” thereby making guilty knowledge one of tbe essential elements of tbe offense, which tbe law requires to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt as a condition precedent to conviction.
S. v. Stathos,
For the error assigned the defendant is entitled to a new trial, and it is so ordered.
New trial.
