— Defendant was charged by county attorney’s, information, tried, by the..court, and found guilty of. the.'crime of injuring or
Section 321.78, in pertinent part, provides: “Any person who * * * willfully' injures or tampers with any vehicle' * * * without the , consent of the owner is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable as provided in section 321.482.” .
We find sufficient evidence the statute was violated.
I. William Kindred,, the complaining, witness, uncle of defendant’s wife, testified- he, drove -his automobile past defendant’s farm when the latter was mowing weeds in the roadside ditch,, defendant jumped off his mowing, machine, picked up a handful of rocks, threw them -at the car: as hard as he could, the rocks struck and- damaged the car, making a hole in the windshield. Kindred stopped his car and defendant ran toward it, wanting to fight.
■Deputy-Sheriff-Robert’Burt "testified lie was riding with Kindred at the latter’s request because he feared' he' would be “run off the road” by defendant. Burt was lying in the back seat when there was a splash of rocks oh the ear, at Burt’s' direction Kindred' stopped his car, defendant approached with his arm drawn back, “he was saying plenty.” Photographs of the car showing the hole in the windshield were received in evidence.
' Mrs. Kindred testified she observed the' hole’ in the windshield when her husband, with Officer Burt, returned home the evening of the oecui'renee and no hole was theré previously.
Defendant admitted Kindred drove past his farm while the former wras mowing : weeds'at the side of ’the road, Kindred stopped his car and defendant went toward’ it.' He denied throwing rocks at’the car and injury to it. "His -versión of whát bajo-pened is that if rocks struck the automobile they were' thrown by the mower, not by him. To illustrate the throwing capacity of the mower he said if it struck a beer can ih the ditch the cafi would be thrown two or three hundred feet.
Defendant’s wife testified she was in -the front yard, 40 or 50 rods from where her husband was mowing, and he did not get off the mowrer until Kindred’s ear stopped.
It is evident the trial court believed the State’s .version of the occurrence. :
II.' Defendant moved for a'dismissal, the equivalent of a motion for directed verdict if the trial were-to--a jury, at the close of the State’s evidence. Any error in-overruling the-motion was waived by failure to renew it at the-close'of all the evidence. Ver Steegh v. Flaugh,
Nevertheless wre ’will not let a' finding - of ’ guilt stand where there is an absence of proof of any essential element- of the crime charged. State v. Myers,
The rules governing our consideration of a claim of insufficient evidence to support a conviction need hardly be stated. Of course the evidence is to- be viewed in the light most favorable to the State. It is the fact-finder’s function (usually the jury’s), not ours, to decide disputed fact questions. Its finding of guilt is binding upon us unless we are satisfied it is with
.out substantial support in the evidence or is clearly.against the weight thereof. State v. Poffenbarger, supra, and citations; State v. Harless,
III. The term “willfully” as used in a criminal statute of the kind involved here is defined in Parker v. Parker,
IV. The argument that it does not appear defendant acted without the consent of Kindred is based on the fact the latter feared trouble of some kind from defendant and requested the deputy, sheriff to ride in the car with him. Certainly the fact finder was not compelled, from this circumstance, to find Kindred consented to injury to his vehicle. He had a right to drive on the public highway and his foresight in asking an officer to accompany him did not amount to consent to what the court could, and evidently did, find was done by defendant.
“One who knows of a crime contemplated against him may remain silent and permit matters to go on, for the purpose of apprehending the criminal, without being held to have assented to the act” (citations). State v. Abley,
