168 P. 524 | Mont. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
Louis Sieff was convicted of willfully and maliciously burning three stacks of hay belonging to H. S. Cutting, and has appealed from the judgment and from an order denying him a new trial.
1. In the original information the crime was designated the malicious destruction of property, but the facts alleged constitute
2. The verdict as first returned found the defendant guilty of malicious destruction of property. This verdict was delivered to
Aside from evidence tending to show that the fire was of incendiary .origin, there was introduced testimony descriptive of Cutting’s premises, and which concerned particularly the relative locations of his buildings, the haystacks in question, and some fences and roads, but this evidence is practically meaningless. It was given with reference to two maps with certain marks and figures upon them which were before the witnesses, but which were not introduced in evidence and are not before us. Whatever value the evidence may have had, it is not suggested that it tended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.
We agree with the Attorney General that his resume of the evidence upon the branch of the case now under consideration comprehends every material fact concerning which the state’s witnesses testified. Those facts are:
About 7:30 o’clock on the evening of September 30, 1915, the defendant left his home riding a black horse belonging to Frank Lacrousiere, for the purpose, as he declared, of getting some cattle which a man had for him. About 10 o ’clock of the same evening Lacrousiere, Marie Purdy and Jessie Purdy, who were staying at defendant’s house, discovered that Cutting’s haystacks were on fire. The hay was near the Cutting home, about a mile from and in plain view of defendant’s residence. About a half hour later defendant returned, coming from the direction of Johnson’s, riding in a gallop or running his horse, and, when asked by Lacrousiere if he had seen the fire, he asked where, and when told at Cutting’s, he replied: “It serves the son-of-a-biteh right; he had it coming.” Defendant then remarked to Laerousiere: “If anybody asks you if you saw the fire, just tell them you saw it in the morning. ’ ’ On the morning following Lacrou
Viewed in the light most favorable to the state, this evidence
There is not a suggestion in the record that the defendant was
Reversed and remanded.