Defendant was convicted of stealing chickens and appeals from the order denying a new trial.
One Mrs. Adams owned a farm with the usual farm buildings some miles west of Elysian. No one resided thereon. A few weeks previous to August 7, 1922, she had moved to this farm, from her home in the village, 11 hens and some 240 young chickens. All were Rhode Island Reds except two young Buff Orphingtons. A boy living near the farm closed the door of the chicken house every evening after the chickens had gone in to roost, and let them out in the mornings. Between the evening of the seventh and the morning of the eighth of August, 1922, the chickens were stolen. Five days thereafter Mrs. Adams claims to have identified some of them in the chicken house of defendant, about two miles north by the road from Mrs. Adams’ farm buildings. Defendant was also raising Rhode Island Reds. Mrs. Adams identified the two Buff Orphingtons, one young chick, the bill of which she had trimmed, and 9 hens.
The contention that the evidence is insufficient to convict cannot be sustained. Mrs. Adams’ identification is positive. That her chickens were stolen is not disputed, and, if some of them were found in defendant’s possession shortly after the larceny, it would be persuasive evidence of defendant’s participation in the crime. There was a case made for the jury, but it is not of the character to which the rule of State v. Nelson, 91 Minn. 143, 97 N. W. 652, applies.
There is nothing to the contention that the defendant’s rights were violated in that the trial at one time proceeded in his absence. After the case had been submitted to the jury, that body came in for further instructions. The court merely put a few questions to learn their wishes, but the moment it appeared that further instructions
The state’s case disclosed that, the morning after the theft, the husband of Mrs. Adams traced the tracks of an automobile which had stopped at the side of the road near the chicken house to the home of a Mr. O’Brien, three miles southeast. Because the track seemed to go into O’Brien’s yard and because of overhearing a remark of Mrs. O’Brien to her husband, Mr. Adams’ suspicions were aroused, and he swore out a complaint upon which issued a warrant to search O’Brien’s premises. But, evidently, these chickens were not found. Defendant offered to prove that a witness he produced listened in on a rural telephone line a day or two after the larceny and heard Mrs. O’Brien state to a chicken buyer at Smith’s Mill that they had a quantity of chickens to sell, that the price was stated, and that the chicken buyer said he would be out to see them. The offer was excluded upon objection. No doubt one accused of crime may prove that it was committed by another, but we think this offer did not tend to show any connection of the O’Briens with the theft. Furthermore, it was the rankest hearsay. Mays v. State, 72 Neb. 723, 101 N. W. 979. The offer was properly excluded according to what may be said to be the almost unanimous holdings of the courts. It did not even come within the principle favored by Mr. Wigmore in his work on Evidence sections 1476 and 1477, and the author of the note to Brown v. State, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 345.
There was proof that one of the hens stolen was a pet hen of Mrs. Adams; that it would come at her call and walk around her “singing.” Over objections the state was permitted to show how this pet hen acted and “sang” when Mrs. Adams came to defendant’s chicken house and called the hens. We think a proper foundation was laid for this evidence. The peculiar trait or habit of this particular hen had been proven. Animals do recognize their keepers. And it was shown that this hen which Mrs. Adams identified had, while under Mrs. Adams’ care previous to the theft, developed a marked preference for her and a distinctive manner in which to give vent to such preference or recognition.
The only case we have found sustaining the reception in evidence of an animal experiment somewhat similar to the one in question is State v. Ward, 61 Vt. 153, 17 Atl. 483, where the prosecution was permitted to show that the horse, driven by the accused on the date of the arson, when thereafter being driven along the same road, of his own accord, made a sharp turn into another road, and then in a like manner off the latter road at a place where the party evidently left the rig for the building that was set on fire. But even there some evidence was offered of the habit of that horse turning into premises and roads previously traversed. The remark of the
If the chickens experimented with were Mrs. Adams’, they were accustomed to spend the night in a chicken house, and had done so with equal readiness in three different localities within the period of a few weeks; and, again, if the chickens were defendant’s, they were equally accustomed to enter a chicken house at night. It may be readily admitted that there is probative value in tests of the sort here used. But the danger is that it may be greatly overrated by a jury, each member of which may recall some instance where some animal exhibited traits similar to that shown by the test. If experiments like the ones here may be received in evidence, the freak act of some, animal, the motives of which cannot be inquired into, may often serve to convict men of heinous crimes. When animals are allowed to take the witness stand, so to speak, their testimony should be limited to those matters wherein human knowledge and experience have ascertained that they therein habitually reveal the truth; such, for instance, as that a colt will know and follow its dam (Miller v. Territory, 9 Ariz. 123, 80 Pac. 321), or that an adult dog will recognize and cling to a master who has had him under control for some considerable time, or where it is proven that a horse or an ox has been trained to go to its stall in a barn so that a fixed habit has been acquired so to do. Of course, tests or experiments with inanimate objects stand upon a different basis. We are of opinion that no proper foundation was laid for the reception of the experiments in question, and for that error there must be a new trial.
Order reversed and a new trial granted.