128 Iowa 509 | Iowa | 1905
We have examined the marks on these four trees, and, while they do correspond to some extent with the marks ’ which Meyer says he made on the Anderson trees and with marks on other trees introduced in evidence taken from Anderson’s orchard and sent up with the record, such correspondence is not to our minds very persuasive. The marks are such as might easily have been made on trees in defendant’s orchard by any one desiring to throw suspicion on defendant. But it seems to us to be of very great significance that Rrekel, after examining only six or seven trees, should by feeling alone, the night being so dark that he could not distinguish between the different kinds of trees, have found two of the four marked trees which were discovered after full search by daylight among the 146 trees in defendant’s orchard; and it is also a curious circumstance that, if defendant took and planted out the forty-one trees which were missing from Anderson’s orchard, he should have happened to get -only four trees which were marked. It is established beyond controversy by the evidence that during
Defendant undertook to account for all the trees found planted in his orchard; but it must be admitted the evidence is conflicting, and that defendant does not satisfactorily prove, aside from his own testimony ánd that of his wife, •that he procured as many trees from the different sources as were found planted. The discrepancy, however, is small, and 'explained, according .to defendant’s theory, by the delivery of a few more trees than the exact number- ordered. On the other hand, however, the excess of trees in defendant’s orchard over the number conclusively proven to have been delivered to him does not amount to half the number of trees shown to have heen taken from Anderson’s orchard, and, as already indicated, only four of the Anderson trees are in,any way traced to the orchard of defendant.
We have reviewed the evidence with.care, and have pointed out, in such detail as can only be justified by the peculiarities of this remarkable case, that the evidence does not justify the conclusion that defendant took any trees whatever from Anderson’s orchard. The conviction is therefore set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial.— Reversed.