173 P. 788 | Mont. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
By an information filed in the district court of Beaverhead county G. H. Moller and Benjamin Mullins were jointly charged with the crime of grand larceny, in that on or about
The salient material features as presented by the state are: P. A. Dansie, a wool-grower residing near Daly’s Spur, about fourteen miles south of Dillon, was in the fore part of July engaged in hauling his wool and loading it on cars at Daly’s Spur. He needed men, and through his brother at Dillon hired Mullins and one other man whose name is not given. Mullins had arrived in Dillon a day or two before and was seen with Moller, who introduced him to Opp as an old acquaintance. Mullins appeared at Dansie’s on Tuesday, July 10, working there the afternoon of that day and the whole of the following two days, quitting on Friday, the 13th. On "Wednesday, the 11th, he borrowed a horse from Dansie to go to the public telephone station at Henneberry’s, Dansie having no telephone. Henneberry’s is a short distance away, and Mullins said as he left, “I am wanted at Helena as a witness, ’ ’ or that he had to phone to Helena because he was wanted as a witness there. Arriving at the station, he had Henneberry call up Moller, who was working for Sullivan’s barn at Dillon. He spoke a few sentences to Moller which Henneberry did not hear, except the last phrase, which was, “at Daly’s Spur,” or “I am at Daly’s Spur.” Shortly after Mullins began to work one of the wagons broke a tongue, and Dansie sent to Dillon for another tongue and a reach, expecting them to arrive on the local freight Thursday evening, July 12. He mentioned the matter at supper, and Mullins offered to go to the station to see if they had come. Mullins went, and had not returned to the ranch at 10:30 that evening. On the same or
That this evidence suffices to establish Moller’s guilt need not be doubted. That one may conjecture circumstances which .will show an opportunity in Mullins to take part in the stealing and which, together with the proven facts, would justify a strong suspicion against him cannot be questioned. But how, as it stands, shall this evidence be said to command the inference, so that one may say beyond reasonable doubt that Mullins took part in the stealing, or, being present, aided and abetted therein, or, not being present,' had advised or encouraged the same? The only positive fact implicating Mullins is that he and Moller drove to Bassett’s, where he held the team while
The case made by Mullins, so far from aiding, tends rather
We may not, of course, usurp the functions of the jury in this case, who were best able to judge of the candor, and thus the credibility, of the witnesses-; but we must say that the written record of defendant’s testimony creates a favorable impression and persuades one to the belief that his conviction is largely due to the facts that Mullins and Moller were friends, that Mullins was with Moller when the wool was sold, and that Mullins ought to have known, and therefore did know, that Moller was selling stolen wool. And it was against just this contingency that the appellant was struggling in the instructions offered. No. 1, we think, was properly refused as too abstract and as covered. Nor can we impute fault to the trial court for refusing No. 3, because the last sentence of it was vague and misleading; but Mullins was, we think, entitled to have the substance of it given more definitely than appears in the instructions as read to the jury, and this will doubtless -be done on a retrial of the case.
There is no prejudicial error among the assignments presented to us, save the refusal of a new trial for insufficiency of the evidence.
Reversed and remanded.