The defendant was convicted of selling mortgaged property (R. S. 1889, sec. 3570). She has appealed and assigns as grounds for the reversal of the judgment that the information is fatally defective, and that the trial court committed error in rejecting competent testimony offered by her.
The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove that the defendant sold the property to the prosecuting witness for $50; that the defendant authorized a third person to execute a bill of sale of the property in her name; that the sale was made without the consent of the mortgagee, and without informing the purchaser of the existence of the mortgage. The defendant denied that she sold the property, or that she authorized anyone to execute the bill of sale, or that in consideration of the pretended sale she received from the prosecuting witness or from anyone else the sum of $50, or any other sum. She further testified that at the date of the bill of sale she was on a protracted spree; that her intoxication had been so great and of such long duration as to temporarily dethrone her reason; that if. she did in fact authorize the execution of the bill of sale, she was not of sufficient mind to comprehend its import. The defendant offered to prove further that at or about the time of the pretended purchase she was sent to the hospital for treatment, and that as soon as she was restored to her right mind and learned of the pretended sale, she promptly denied it, and that she immediately went to see the mortgagee and informed it of the alleged fraudulent claim and of the place where the property was stored. The court excluded this testimony, of which the defendant complains.
The judgment of the court of criminal correction will be reversed and the cause remanded.
