153 Iowa 381 | Iowa | 1911
The defendant was accused of breaking and entering a certain shooting gallery in the city of Shenandoah in which A. E. Carlson and S. J. Roscoe kept certain goods and wares, with intent on part of said defendant to commit larceny. On the evening of the 24th of -December, 1910, Carlson and Roscoe, who were conducting the shooting gallery, locked up the building and went away, and it was not reopened until the morning of December 26, 1910, when it was discovered that a pane or sash of glass in the front door had been broken, evidently by some force applied from the outside, and a gun which had been left in the room was not to be found. The defendant being, arrested upon suspicion of complicity in the act and advised to give up the gun, thereby avoiding the necessity of a search warrant, he went with the officer to the room occupied by him and produced it from its place of concealment among articles of clothing. He does not now deny stealing the gun, but denies that he broke open the building from which it was taken.' His story told on the witness stand is that, passing the door in question on the evening of
Error is also assigned upon instructions given concerning the effect of testimony impeaching the general moral character of witnesses and upon defendant’s explanation of the means of his entrance of the building.
The law as laid down in these instructions is in substantial harmony with those ordinarily given, in such cases, and as' they have frequently been approved, we need not extend this opinion for their discussion. We have examined the record with reference to all the exceptions taken by-the defendant and find no, cause for ordering a new trial.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.