105 P. 87 | Mont. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was charged with burglary, committed by entering a suite of rooms occupied as a residence by Charles D. Curtis and Mae L. Curtis, at No. 117% Broadway, in the city of Helena, with the intent to commit grand larceny therein. Upon a trial he was found guilty of burglary in the second degree and sentenced to serve a term in the state prison. This appeal is from the judgment.
We think the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury, and to justify the finding that the defendant is guilty as charged. If the testimony of the state’s witnesses was to be credited, the defendant, about two hours after Miss Curtis left the ring in her room, had it in his possession, pledged it for a loan, signing a fictitious name, and thereafter denied all knowledge of the transaction. It has been held by this court, following the rule recognized by the courts generally, that mere possession of property recently stolen is not sufficient to convict the possessor of a larceny of it. (Territory v. Doyle, 7 Mont. 245. 14 Pac. 671; State v. Sullivan, 9 Mont. 174, 22 Pac. 1088; State v. Wells, 33 Mont. 291, 83 Pac. 476.) When, however, this fact is supplemented by other facts inconsistent with the idea that the possession is honest, such as the giving of a false or improbable explanation of it, or a failure to explain, when a larceny of the property is charged, or the possession of a forged bill of sale, or the giving of a fictitious name, or the like, a case is made sufficient to submit to the jury. (Territory v. Doyle; State v. Sullivan; State v. Wells, supra.) The rule as to the materiality of such evidence is well stated by the supreme court of Maine, in State v. Bartlett, 55 Me. 200, as follows: “If a person accused remains silent when he may speak, he does so from choice, and the choice he makes upon such occasions has always been regarded competent evidence. It is the act of the party. From time immemorial the reply or the
So, where the charge is burglary j if property taken from the owner is soon thereafter found in possession of the person charged with the felonious entry, proof of this fact, together with circumstances showing guilty conduct, is presumptive evidence, not only of the larceny, but also that he made use of the means by which the property was acquired. (People v. Lang, 142 Cal. 482, 76 Pac. 232; Holland v. State, 112 Ga. 540, 37 S. E. 887; Smith v. State, 62 Ga. 663; Favro v. State, 39 Tex. Cr. App. 452, 73 Am. St. Rep. 950, 46 S. W. 932; Anderson v. Commonwealth, 18 Ky. Law Rep. 99, 35 S. W. 542; People v. Joy, 135 Cal. xix, 66 Pac. 964; State v. Norris, 27 Nash. 453, 67 Pac. 983; Walker v. Commonwealth, 28 Gratt. (Va.) 969; State v. Bryan, 19 Nev. 365, 11 Pac. 317; State v. Powell, 61 Kan. 81, 58 Pac. 968; 1 Wharton’s Criminal Law, 10th ed., sec. 813; 6 Cye. 246.) Burglary is one degree removed from larceny; but, when the facts proven warrant the finding of the larceny, and the surrounding circumstances are such as to show that the larceny could not have been committed without the felonious entry, the evidence is sufficient to warrant the finding of the burglary also.
The jury evidently discredited the assumption of ignorance by the defendant as indicated by his denial, and accepted the •theory of the Curtises as to the loss of the ring, and also the story of Yund and his workman as to the transaction at Yund’s store. This being so, it was within their province to discredit, as they did, the evidence offered by the defendant to establish his alibi. The court properly instructed the jury that, in .arriving at their conclusion as to the guilt or innocence of the
The court instructed the jury, in substance, that the mer'e possession of the property by the defendant without other incriminating circumstances, would not warrant a conviction. The contention is made that the verdict is contrary to the law thus stated. The instructions, as a whole, particularly in the respect referred to, were as favorable to the defendant as he could ask. As we have pointed out, the question of his guilt or innocence did not rest alone upon his possession of the property furtively taken from the Curtis rooms. Upon the evidence the verdict might have been guilty or not guilty, in view of the other circumstances proven. It is therefore not contrary to the law.
Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.