45 Iowa 425 | Iowa | 1877
We are satisfied that the evidence is utterly insufficient to support the verdict, and that for that reason a new trial should have been granted. Payne’s harness was stolen on the night of the 27th of April, 1874. On the 22d day of July, 1874, the defendant was arrested in Wilson county, Kansas, and had in his possession a set of harness which Payne claims are the ones stolen from him.
2. The defendant’s family resides in "Wilson county, Kansas. For four months prior to the date of the alleged larceny defeudant had lived with his brother-in-law, J. T. Bentley, about one-half mile from Payne’s. On the evening of the 27th of April, the defendant was at Bentley’s house about sun down. After supper he and Bentley went to Corbin’s, a distance of one-fourth of a mile. They left there about ten o’clock and returned to Bentley’s, where they remained about two hours. Bentley helped defendant carry his trunk thence to the depot, a distance of two miles, where they arrived about one o’clock in the morning. At 3:44 a. m. defendant went west to Council Bluffs, on his way home to Kansas. The trunk was packed at Bentley’s house, and no harness were in it. The night operator saw defendant get on the train, but saw no harness in his possession. The defendant’s wife testifies that he arrived at home near Fredonia, in Kansas, 16 or 18 miles from the railroad, about the last day of April, afoot, and brought no baggage with him. His trunk came in about a week; there were no harness in it.
3. Charles Sweeney, an attorney at law of Fredonia, and Stewart Osborne, a son of defendant, testify that they saw defendant buy a set of harness at an auction sale at Chaunte, Kansas, 28 miles from Fredonia, in May, 1874, and pay $18.35 therefor. Sweeney, at Osborne’s request, examined the harness, and told him what he thought of them, before they were bought. Both these witnesses fully and satisfactorily identify the harness bought at Chaunte as the same produced upon the trial, and claimed by Payne. In addition to all this it is proved that the defendant’s character is good, and that
The former part of this instruction ought not to have been given, for there is not a scintilla of evidence that the auction sale was a subterfuge to keep up appearances of honesty. If it should be held that the latter part of the instruction cures the error in the former part, then the verdict should have been set aside as not supported by the evidence, for there is no conflict in the evidence that the auction sale occurred, and under the evidence submitted there can be nothing more than a mere suspicion that it was not bona fide.
Reversed.