The sole question is whether the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for nonsuit.
Defendant did not offer any evidence. The State’s evidence tends to show the following facts:
About 1:00 A.M., 17 November 1963, defendant and J. L. Johnson, Jr., were riding in an automobile driven by Elmo West. Near the clubhouse of Lenoir Country Club, Inc., West, at the request of defendant and Johnson, let them out. When they got out of the car they “said something about going to the Country Club to break in it.” West “couldn’t tell who was talking.” They told West to come back for them in 30 minutes. West drove from Smith’s Cross-roads to Whitnel and back several times while waiting to pick them up. He was observed by two police officers, who kept his “car under surveillance, staying a distance behind.” West approached the country club at a slow speed and about 50 to 75 yards from the clubhouse stopped and the defendant came “out of the woods” and got in West’s car. He said something to West about $41.00, but didn’t say where he got it or how he got it. Defendant and West were taken into custody about % mile from the country club by other police officers who had been alerted. The officers found no money on the person of defendant. The officers who had been following West returned to the vicinity of the country club *514 and found Johnson crouched or sitting near a tree in some bushes. He had $43.22 in coins “in his right front pocket.” The officers later returned to the place they had arrested Johnson and found $41 in currency. The officers went to the clubhouse and found a window broken near a latch, the inside office door was damaged, the cigarette machine had been broken into, and the top drawer of a filing cabinet had been pushed back. There were marks on the window and door indicating they had been pried open. A screw driver, found on the person of Johnson when he was arrested, fitted as to size and shape the marks and indentations on the door and window. No finger prints were found, but Johnson had gloves.
We must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, and give the State the benefit of every reasonable inference fairly deducible therefrom.
State v. Gentry,
The motion for nonsuit on the larceny count should have been allowed. There is no evidence that Lenoir Country Club, Inc., found any money to be missing or had any money in the building. The evidence is silent as to whether there was, before the entry, any money in the filing cabinet or in the cigarette machine or elsewhere in the building. And if it may be inferred that there was, there is no evidence of the ownership. No official, agent or employee of the club testified at the *515 trial. There is simply no evidence that any money belonging to it has been stolen. The State failed to prove the larceny as alleged.
On the count of housebreaking- — -Affirmed.
On the count of larceny — Reversed.
