122 So. 52 | La. | 1929
Joe Wales and Clyde Bailey were convicted of robbery. Their appeal presents ten bills of exception, as follows:
Bill No. 10 was reserved to the overruling of a motion on arrest of judgment on the ground that the indictment charged no offense because it did not charge that the person robbed was the owner of the money taken or in lawful possession thereof.
This was not necessary. In State v. Curtin,
And the reason is that robbery is nothing else but larceny accompanied by putting in fear. But larceny may be committed even where the property be stolen from one who has himself stolen it. 36 Corp. Jur. pp. 832, 840 (Larceny, §§ 319, 344); 17 Rul. Cas. Law, p. 22 (Larceny, § 25).
It was therefore immaterial that the indictment charged that the money stolen from John W. Monroe was the property of the Bank of Glenora, without charging that Monroe was in lawful possession thereof. The bill is therefore without merit.
Bill of exception No. 3 raises the same point by objection to any testimony as to the robbery, and is also without merit.
Bills Nos. 4 and 5 were reserved to the ruling allowing the indictment to be amended by alleging that John W. Monroe was the cashier of the bank (and therefore in lawful possession of the bank's money), and to the refusal to grant a continuance after the amendment. As no amendment was necessary, there is no merit in the bills.
Bills Nos. 6 and 7 were reserved to the admission of evidence showing an alleged independent crime, to wit, the robbery of an automobile with which to perpetrate the robbery.
It is generally true that an independent crime cannot be shown, and is prejudicial to the accused. But in this instance the crime was a mere incident of the witness' testimony *325
going to show identification of the robbers, their rapid progress to the scene of the crime from a town some 35 miles distant, and their preparation for the crime by loading a machine gun into the automobile and departing after taking the automobile and binding the owner thereof. The case of People v. Renwick,
Bill No. 1 is abandoned. Bill No. 9 is a motion for a new trial and presents nothing for consideration.
Bill No. 2 is reserved to the admission of testimony showing that one of the accused was shabbily dressed before the robbery, but well dressed afterward. This was admissible as circumstantial evidence, even though the state did not rely entirely on circumstantial evidence to prove its case.
Bill No. 8 was reserved to the admission of rebuttal testimony showing that the accused were within 35 miles of the place of robbery on the day before; the accused having attempted an alibi purporting to show that they were both far out of the state at that time and at the time the robbery was committed. The evidence was clearly admissible *326
in rebuttal, although cumulative. State v. Holbrook,