182 P. 270 | Mont. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants were convicted of the crime of grand larceny, and appealed from the judgment and from an order denying them a new trial.
William McCollum, a witness for the state, testified that on the evening of February 13 of this year he and his wife visited the home of defendant Slothower; that the four defendants Avere present; that after supper the defendants prepared to leave; that one of them remarked that they intended to have pig liver for breakfast; that they invited him to accompany them, but he declined; that they left in an automobile driven by defendant Anderson, taking with, them a rifle; that as they left he inquired whether they wanted him to have water heated, and received a negative reply; that later he and his wife went to their home, but that he immediately returned to Slothower’s place and waited for some time; that shortly after midnight the four defendants returned with three hogs which had just been killed- that one of the four stated that they had procured the hogs from Harry Wight’s ranch; that defendant Slothower complained that he had lost one of his gloves and the cleaning rod for his gun, probably in Wight’s hogpen; that the five men then heated water and dressed the hogs, and that he (McCollum)
By instruction 21 the court defined the term “accomplice” substantially in the language approved by this court in State ex rel. Webb v. District Court, 37 Mont. 191, 15 Ann. Cas. 743, 95 Pac. 593, and informed the jury that it was a question of fact for their determination whether McCollum was an
To constitute McCollum an aeeomplicé, he must have entertained a criminal intent common with that which moved the
The corpus delicti — the fact that the larceny had been committed- — -was established beyond question by the testimony of
Complaint is made of the ruling of the court admitting in
The defendants Eaden and Anderson testified that they spent
By instruction No. 2 the court defined circumstantial evidence and continued: ‘ ‘ The rule of law is that, to warrant a conviction on a criminal charge upon circumstantial evidence alone, the circumstances should be such as to produce the same degree of certainty as that which arises from direct testimony, and sufficient to exclude all reasonable doubt of the party’s guilt.”
At the instance of defendants the court gave instruction 28,
Neither instruction 2 nor 28 is technically accurate, but neither one of them is fundamentally erroneous so far as it goes. There is not any substantial conflict between them; on the contrary, they may be construed together and harmonized in all essential particulars.
The defendants denied that they were together on the evening of February 13, but admitted that they were all at Slothower’s place one evening in February, when Slothower and Anderson secured some potatoes from a neighbor, Knute Skajeveland.
We find no reversible error in the record. The judgment and order are affirmed.
'Affirmed.