60 Iowa 381 | Iowa | 1882
Lead Opinion
I. The indictment was presented on the sixth day of November, 1880, and it was charged therein that the defendant on the first day of September, 1880, stole three hundred bushels of flax seed, and five hundred bushels of oats, the property of Stephen Adams.
The grain which it is claimed the defendant stole was grown upon a farm in Dallas county, which, we infer from tlie abstract, the defendant once owned or had an interest in, but upon which there was a mortgage which had been foreclosed, and the property sold, and a sheriffs deed made therefor. Afterwards action was taken by the holder of the sheriffs deed to obtain possession of the premises. Pending this action, certain parties were in possession of the land as tenants of some one, but of whom does not clearly appear from the abstract. The tenants, either pending this action for possession or before it was commenced, sowed part of the farm in flax and oats. Pending the action, and on the twenty-fourth day of April, 1880, Stephen Adams was appointed receiver in said action, to take charge of the real estate in controversy pending the suit. Afterwards, on the twenty-seventh day of July, 1880, a further order of the court was made, directing the receiver to take charge of and control the crops upon the farm, and to harvest and dispose of the same, and to render an account of his doings in the premises.
It is claimed by the State that, after said appointment, and after Adams was authorized to take possession and control of the crops, he went upon the premises and made a contract with the tenants by which they were to harvest and thrash the oats and flax, and keep an account of the expense thereof, and haul the grain to market at a specified price per wagon load; and that, being thus in possession of thergrain,' the defendant’ by stealth caused some of it to be concealed under hay and straw in a slough, and in a cave, and hauled nearly all. of it to market, and sold it as his own, and appropriated the proceeds to his own use.
It is urged that this is the only section of the statute under which the defendant could have been indicted, tried and convicted. We think that this cannot be so, because a receiver does not hold property under what is denominated a legal process issuing out of any court. He holds no process whatever. He acts under an order of the court, and he is not an officer within the meaning of that section.
We think the proposition of law contained in this instruction is correct. If the evidence shows that the tenants who raised the crops and were in possession of the premises peacably surrendered any claim they had thereto, and agreed with the receiver that they would hold and manage the crops for him, and the grain was afterwards stolen, the possession of the tenants was the possession of the receiver, in the same sense that it would be if the receiver had himself raised the
The jury were fully warranted from the evidence in finding that such an agreement wan made, and the evidence does not show that Rivers was in the actual possession of the farm when the receiver made the contract with the tenants', but it does show that he was not in possession. It is true, it appears that he was claiming some right there to a share of the crop, probably as landlord. But there is no showing in the record that he had any legal right, either as landlord or otherwise.
Adams received only a small part of the flax seed raised on the farm, and he received none of the oats of which there were 500 or 600 bushels. Sometime after the appointment, Rivers and the parties in possession were arrested for contemptuously iiiterfering with the receiver. They were imprisoned, and purged themselves of the contempt by executing a writing surrendering the grain to the receiver. After this, some one stole away the grain and sold it. We believe the jury were fully warranted in finding from the evidence that the defendant employed the teams which hauled the grain, and received the proceeds. Indeed, it aj)pears to us without doubt that, after he surrendered the grain, he took it, hauled it away and sold it. It is true, it appears from the evidence that he owned or had control of other farms in the neighborhood, and that grain was hauled from them to the farm of which Adams was appointed receiver, and it is thus sought to show that the grain which he marketed was not that in controversy. But we think the jury were warranted in finding that he feloniously took and carried away that with which he is charged in the indictment. The fact that he employed others to take flax seed from the barn, and put it away in a slough, and cover it up and conceal it, and then haul it away
We have examined this record with «are. We find no error in it, either in rulings on the evidence or in the instructions of the court to the jury, and are united in the opinion that the judgment should be
Affirmed.
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
“Now if you (the jury) further find that afterward, and within three years next before the sixth day of November, A. D. 1880, the defendants, in Dallas county, .Iowa, knowing of the said order of the said court, and of the acts of said Adams in qualifying as such receiver and taking charge of said property (if he did qualify and take charge of it), and knowing that he (the defendant) had no authority so to do, did by himself or by others, whom he employed, knowingly and willfully take and carry away the property mentioned in the indictment, or any part thereof, with intent to deprive the said Adams thereof, and to convert it to his own use, you should find him guilty as charged.”
This instruction required that, in order to convict, the jury should find that Eivers knowing he had no authority to take the grain, knowingly and willfully, by himself or his
There are other questions discussed in the petition for rehearing which we do not deem it necessary to again consider, and we adhere to the conclusion that the judgment of the District Court must be
Affirmed.