Defendant Robert D. Sparks appeals, seeking the reversal of a jury conviction of third degree felоny theft in violation of U.C.A., 1953, § 76-6-404, or a new trial. He was found guilty of obtaining or exercising unauthorized control over an Angus bull owned by Basin Land and Livestock Company with the purpose of depriving the Company of it.
Raising four points on appeal, defendant first contends that the evidence was insufficient to' support the verdict. This Court views thе evidence, and reasonable inferences from it, in a light most favorable to the verdict,
State v. Petree,
Utah,
Examining the evidence in support of the verdict, there was testimony by an employee of Basin Land and Livestock Company that he saw a person with shoulder-length brownish-blond hair, wearing a green coat and levis, running from the Company’s corral toward a creek. At the corral the еmployee discovered a dead Angus bull, steam rising from its cut-open body. Minutes later the employee stopped a truck which was leaving the area and recognized the passenger, later identified as dеfendant, to be the person he had seen running from the corral. Even though the weather was cold, defendаnt wore only a short sleeved shirt. His levis were water-splashed. He pointed out his dry tennis shoes before the employee ever mentioned that he had seen a person running toward the creek.
Upon investigatiоn, officers observed Western bootprints in the ground alongside and into the creek. A crime laboratory еxpert could not determine the caliber of the bullet that created fragments found in the bull. He testified that thеy did not come from one of two rifles the defendant had with him in the truck. He could not conclude what gun was used. The defendant claimed that he and the driver of the truck were in the area hunting albeit without licenses; and, the driver explained that they had been looking for a tree for his wife. In view of this evidence, we see no reаson to substitute our judgment for the jury’s. The evidence against defendant was not so inherently improbable that it would nеcessitate a reasonable doubt in the minds of reasonable persons as to his guilt.
Neither do we find an аbuse of discretion in the denial of defendant’s motion for a new trial which he made on the ground of newly discovered evidence since he apparently knew or could have discovered the evidence prior to trial.
State v. Conrad,
Utah,
Defendant’s second point, that evidenсe of certain photographs was improperly admitted at trial, is also without merit. Relying upon U.C.A., 1953, § 77-35-16 which requirеs in subsection (4) that the prosecutor disclose any evidence known to him that tends to negate the guilt of the accused, the defendant claims that he should have been notified of the photographs in question before trial. However, the photographs which were taken a few days after the crime were introduced only for illustrative purposes to show the lay of the land and the position of the corral and its gate. Nothing in them required that the defendant be notified since they were not probative of his guilt or innocence. Further, the prosecutor furnished the defendant before trial the names of all the State’s witnesses along with thеir statements and officer’s reports. The defendant offers nothing to evidence that he was harmed by the introduction of the photographs of the scene.
Defendant’s third contention is that at a bench conference the trial court prohibited his inquiry into the reason his co-defendant, the driver of the truck, had been dismissed from the case. He argues that he was thereby denied an adequate defense. This Court cannot rule on matters outside the trial court record.
Burnham v.
Hayward, Utah,
Defendant’s fourth point, that his right to a speedy trial was abridged under U.C.A., 1953, § 77-1-6(1)(f), is fоreclosed from consideration since he failed to assert his right to a speedy trial in the trial court аnd thereby waived his right to raise the issue here.
State v. Knill,
Utah,
Finally, defendant argues that his first counsel, who withdrew from the case before trial, had some improper connection with the prosecutor. However, defendant did not preserve the issue by raising it at trial and making a record of it. We are thereby precluded from considering it here.
The conviction is affirmed.
