172 Iowa 477 | Iowa | 1915
That someone broke and entered the tailor shop of William Caldbeek about March 5, 1914, and took therefrom several pieces of cloth and several pairs of trousers, was fully established by the evidence. The main issue is whether the accused was the guilty party. It is undisputed that he took cloth to Morgan, a tailor, and had two suits of clothes and . a pair of trousers made therefrom, about the middle of May or fore part of June of that year, and that also, in the latter part of June or early in July, he took to one Sicilia two pieces of goods, to be made up into a suit of clothes and an overcoat. These goods were identified and, when his premises were searched, about the middle of July, he claimed to have been unable to find a key to his trunk and said it contained a “bundle of dirty underclothes”; but when it was opened, a suit of clothes made by Morgan was found therein, and also a piece of goods and a pair of trousers, all fully identified as those taken from the tailor shop. Hanging in the room, also, was a pair of trousers belonging to a customer of Caldbeek’s, and two other pairs taken from the shop. The defendant interposed the defense that, some time in April, he purchased the cloth of a Jewish peddler, whom he had met at a blacksmith shop, for the sum of $18; that he had lost the key to his trunk and had been trying to get another to unlock it, and that he told tire officers that there was winter underwear in it and did not know that the suit of clothes was in the trunk; that his memory had been impaired by drinking so that he did not recall the fact; that teamsters employed by him brought to his place two of the pairs of trousers found; that the pair in the hay shed back of the house was left there by a former employee, to be cared for until he returned. Evidence was also introduced, tending to corroborate his account of meeting the peddler in a blacksmith shop, and concerning the trousers in the hay shed, to establish an alibi and to prove his former good character.
Here the accused admitted having acquired possession
In view of the circumstances disclosed on the trial, we are inclined to regard the issue as to whether the possession of defendant was so recent as that guilt might be inferred therefrom as solely for the jury. With its conclusion, we ought not to interfere. — Affirmed.