The indictment in this cause, on which defendant was found guilty of burglary, acquitted of larceny, and his imprisonment assessed at three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, is-founded on section 3526, Revised Statutes, 1889, and is, in its charging portion, the following: “ That Rus
This indictment is objected to because it contains no charge of any “ felonious intent.”
This claim is not tenable. The indictment is, in form and substance, substantially identical with forms found in Chitty and Archbold. 3 Chit. Crim. Law, *1117; 2 Arch. Crim. Prac. & Plead. (Pomeroy’s Notes) 1071, 1075. Such form as above has been in substance and effect expressly approved by this court in several eases. State v. McGraw, 87 Mo. 161; State v. Shields, 89 Mo. 259; State v. Tyrrell, 98 Mo. 354.
Besides, even if the felonious intent be not alleged, or insufficiently alleged, such defect will be cured by the subsequent allegation of the commission of a substantive felony after breaking and entering, which is the best evidence of, and decisive of, a felonious intent. Com. v. Brown, 3 Rawle, 207; Jones v. State, 11 N. H. 269; Com. v. Hope, 22 Pick. 1; 1 Hale, P. C. 560; 2 East, P. C., chap. 15, sec. 25, p. 514; Rex v. Furnival, Russ. & Ry. 445; State v. Henley, 30 Mo. 509.
When defendant stepped out, Mrs. Baker said: “Russell, we have had enough of this; this has been going on long enough,” or “we have been deviled long-enough.” Defendant replied: “Mrs. Baker, I hope you don’t think I am here to do anything wrong.” Mrs.' Baker said: “It looks like it, Russell; this thing has been going on a good while; this is the second
Defendant’s version of the matter was this: The morning of the fifteenth of August, he got up about 5 o’clock; it was a cloudy, dark morning; kindled a fire and started to George Hackler’s well to get a bucket of water; when he reached the front gate of Hackler’s yard, he set the bucket down under.a cedar tree (where it was afterward seen by Mrs. Geo. Haekler and defendant’s wife); he then started down to Baker’s stable to feed Baker’s team; he saw the door in the west end (front) of the wareroom was open; supposing some of the Bakers were in the store, he went to the wareroom door, stepped in and seeing no one there walked out and closed the door; went southwest to Baker’s stable to feed the team; finding the corncrib which contained the feed locked, he went out of the stable and then observed that one of the double doors on south side of the store was open; he crossed direct to that door, stepped inside, stood there' for a moment; not seeing anything he walked out of the same open door, and then met Will Garvey and asked him where Mrs. Baker was. He said, on the west side of
Defendant denied having entered the store for any purpose except- as above stated. He explained his reluctance to being searched, after stepping out of the store, because he had a “female syringe” in his pocket which he always carried there (and in this he was corroborated by his wife) and didn’t want tobe exposed at that time by being searched before women. It was in evidence also that defendant as he admitted on cross-examination had burglarized the same store some fifteen years before, being assisted therein by one John Lockhart, and had pleaded guilty to that charge.
Various errors are assigned as having occurred at the trial, among them that error was committed in the examination of Ed. F. Imes, a witness for the state brought in rebuttal. He was questioned in regard to a conversation he had with Lee Taylor at the látter’s home and which Taylor had- denied.
It seems that the proper foundation had been laid by asking Lee Taylor the proper questions. This being the case, it was entirely competent to examine Imes as a witness in rebuttal in order to impeach Lee Taylor, but not to be used as original evidence. For the purpose of the impeachment this rebutting evidence was introduced, and it. was restricted to that purpose by an instruction given at defendant’s instance, and in this there was no error.
•Nothing is better settled than that having alleged a burglary to have been done with an intent to perpetrate a certain felony, evidence of another independent felony can not be received. East says: “But whatever be the felony really intended, the same must be laid in the indictment and proved agreeably to the fact. * * * And so if it be alleged that the entry was with intent to commit one sort of felony, and the fact appear to be that it was with intent to commit another; that is not sufficient.” 2 East, P. C. 514; 3 Glf. Evid. [14 Ed.], sec. 82. So far as concerns the goods having been taken, if they were removed by the thief from their accustomed places with intent to take them, this was a sufficient asportation to constitute the taking a theft.
The offer of defendant to prove that Jim Baker, the blacksmith, had made a key which would fit and unlock the store in question, and that he intended to burglarize it, was properly rejected. Mere threats by third persons to commit the crime charged against the accused, or the confessions of such persons in open court that they had committed such crime, is wholly inadmissible in defense of the party on trial, because such matters are purely hearsay. State v. Duncan, 6 Ire. 236; State v. May, 4 Dev. 332, et seq.; State v. Patrick, 3 Jones (N. C.) Law, 443.
If there had accompanied the offer made, the further offer to prove that Jim Baker after making the threats or the key for the purpose mentioned, had done
For the error aforesaid, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.