69 Wash. 38 | Wash. | 1912
This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury finding the appellant guilty of larceny. In the information it is charged that the appellant, in the county of King, state of Washington, on the 4th day of March, 1911, with intent to deprive and defraud the owner thereof, wilfully, unlawfully, and feloni
It is the appellant’s first contention that the evidence is insufficient to justify a verdict against him, and that the trial court should have sustained his challenge to the evidence made at the conclusion of the state’s case. But we think the evidence made a case for the jury. It was made to appear conclusively that the appellant received and disposed of stolen property; and there was evidence, although not perhaps so conclusive, that he knew at the time he received the property that the same had been stolen, and that he disposed of it with the intent to deprive and defraud the owner thereof. It is the province of the jury in criminal cases to pass on the weight and sufficiency of the evidence; and when the court finds there is substantial evidence of a fact, it must be left for the jury to say whether its probative force meets the standard required for a conviction, whether it convinces them beyond a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt.
The court gave the following instruction:
“You are instructed in this case that the following facts must be established beyond a reasonable doubt by the state in order to convict the defendant of the crime charged in the information: 1st, it must be established that the goods, or some of them, described in the information had, in fact by some person known, or unknown, been stolen, in King county, Washington; 2nd, that the said goods had been received by the defendant and that at the time he knew that the same were stolen. In this connection, I instruct you that knowledge of any particular fact may be inferred from the knowledge of such other facts as would put an ordinary prudent man upon inquiry, and it therefore is incumbent upon the state to prove in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt, either that the defendant had actual knowledge that the property was stolen, or that he was in possession of facts
The concluding clause of this instruction, we think, does not correctly state the rule. While the statute provides that knowledge of any particular fact may be inferred from the knowledge of such other facts as should put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry, it is not meant to be asserted thereby that the jury, in a case where knowledge is an essential element of a crime, may find that the accused had such knowledge on evidence that does not convince them of the fact beyond a reasonable doubt. The jury, if they find that the accused had knowledge of facts that should put a reasonable man upon inquiry as to a particular fact, may infer therefrom that he had knowledge of the particular fact, but they are not obligated to draw the inference. The statute lays down a rule of evidence, not one of positive law. Its language is that knowledge of any particular fact “may” be inferred from the knowledge of such other facts as should put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry; not that it “must” be so inferred; hence, it was error to instruct the jury that it is sufficient proof that the defendant had knowledge that the property received and disposed of by him was stolen property to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he had knowledge of facts sufficient to put an ordinarily prudent person upon inquiry as to whether or not it was stolen property. The jury might properly have been instructed that they could infer that the defendant had such knowledge from proofs of the other fact, but they should have been left to draw the inference themselves, and instructed unqualifiedly that, in order to find the defendant guilty, the evidence must convince them beyond a reasonable doubt that he had knowledge at the time he received and disposed of the property that the same was stolen property.
The court also gave the following instruction:
“If any of the property mentioned in this information was taken from the owners without their consent, and against
It is conceded by the state that the instruction is made erroneous by the use of the word “without” in the last clause of the instruction, but it is contended that the use of the word was an inadvertence on the part of the court, or perhaps a mistake of the stenographer in taking down the judge’s words. But the instruction has other faults than the one indicated. As it is transcribed, it is scarcely intelligible, and it is impossible now to know what idea the jury may have gathered therefrom. The suggestion that the judge’s words were not correctly reported in this particular paragraph gains force when the balance of his instructions, which are unusually clear, are considered; but the record is before us over the judge’s signature, and we must accept it as a true transcript of the proceedings. As set forth therein, the instruction is error.
The other assignments of error do not require special consideration. The judgment appealed from is reversed and a new trial awarded.
Mount, Ellis, and Morris, JJ., concur.
Dunbar, C. J., dissents.