92 P. 829 | Kan. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On February 16, 1906, a complaint was filed before a justice of the peace charging the appellant with taking, stealing and carrying away two steers,
It is argued that the face of the information disclosed the fact that the prosecution was barred by the statute of limitations. It has been decided that the commencement of a criminal proceeding does not date from the filing of the information, but from the issuance of the warrant which is served. The information need not allege the facts relied on to avoid the bar, but the court will look into the prior proceedings and from them ascertain the point at which the running of the statute was arrested. (See The State v. Waterman, 75 Kan. 253, 88 Pac. 1074, and cases cited in the opinion.)
Appellant says that an 'examination of the prior proceedings discloses that the complaint-and warrant were void because the date of the offense was charged in blank, so that it did not appear but that prosecution was barred. The attack made upon the complaint and warrant came too late. The motion to quash was not filed until the day of the preliminary examination. The
Besides what has been said, the court is unable to agree with appellant upon the merits of his claim. The complaint and warrant were merely indefinite in respect to a matter upon which neither of them need be exact. They charged a larceny in February, 1904. Since under this charge the prosecution might not be barred they were not nullities or even subject to a motion to quash. If they had fixed the date of the crime so that apparently a prosecution would be barred, still they would not be void. It was expressly so held in thé case of In re Stewart, 60 Kan. 781, 57 Pac. 976. The decision is based upon the reiterated doctrine that the chief purpose of a warrant is not notice, but the detention of a person charged with crime until a preliminary examination can be held; that it may merely state the imputed offense by name and be sufficient;
Appellant lived in Oklahoma.. While the steers in question were in the custody of their owner they were kept part of the time in Oklahoma and part of the time in Kansas. Under the evidence they might have been stolen in either jurisdiction. They were sold in Oklahoma by appellant and his partner (with whom he was jointly charged), and were delivered to the purchaser at Kiowa, Kan., on February 29, 1904. Therefore the matter of venue became important. The court instructed the jury as follows:
“In order to convict the defendants, or either of them, of the crime of grand larceny as charged in the information, the burden of proof is upon the state to establish to the satisfaction of the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, each and all the following material allegations, to wit:
“(1) That the defendants, Frank White and Elmer Williams, or either of them if they were acting in concert, as partners, or counseling, aiding and abetting each other in the commission of the crime, did wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously, take, steal and carry away the two steers charged to have been stolen in the information, or either of them, branded with g (commonly called 76 connected) on the left hip and with a bar as follows / (commonly called bar) on the left jaw, ear marked with an underbit in each ear.
“(2) That said offensé was committed in Barber county, Kansas, or if not committed in Barber county, Kansas, then that the steers, or either of them, the property of James M. Hale, having been stolen by the*659 defendants, or either of them, in Oklahoma Territory, were brought by the defendants, or either of them, when acting in concert, as partners, or while counseling, aiding or abetting each other in the .commission of the crime, into the state of Kansas; or that the defendants counseled, aided, abetted, or assisted others in bringing said steers, or either of them,- from Oklahoma Territory, where they were stolen, into Barber county, Kansas.
“(3) That said offense was committed within two years immediately prior to the bringing of this action, which was brought on;the 16th day of February.”
Appellant complains of the last clause, of the second subdivision of this instruction, and asserts that under it the jury did not need to be satisfied that the defendants or either of them stole the cattle, or assisted any one else in stealing them, or even knew that they were stolen when they were brought into Kansas. This argument ignores the canon that the entire instruction must be considered in ascertaining the meaning of any portion of it. The clause impugned is an alternative of the concluding portion of the one immediately preceding it. The defendants, having stolen the cattle in Oklahoma, must have brought them into Kansas or must have counseled, aided, abetted or assisted others in bringing them into Kansas. The meaning is unmistakable in the light of all that precedes and follows. In the first subdivision the court told the jury they must find that the defendants or one of them stole the cattle; the second was devoted to venue; and the third fixed the limit of time within which the stealing must have taken place. In the discussion of venue and in the discussion of time the “offense” referred to is the offense committed by the defendants mentioned in the first subdivision, and in the venue portion of the charge all references to stolen cattle are references to cattle stolen by the defendants as described in the first subdivision. So interpreted, as it clearly must be, the clause objected to means: “or that the defendants counseled, aided, abetted or assisted others in bringing
One of the contested questions in the case was the mutilation and change of brands and marks upon the cattle. The court charged the jury that if the defendants knowingly and wilfully changed and altered the brands and marks upon the steers with intent to steal them or to convert them to their own use, and sold and disposed of them and delivered them to the purchaser in Barber county, Kansas, such conduct would clearly amount to grand larceny. Appellant argues that under this instruction it was open to the jury to convict him for acts done in Oklahoma, and that, too, without any evidence having been introduced showing that such acts were criminal in the foreign jurisdiction. The instruction was evidently drawn under section 285 of the crimes act (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2286), which reads as follows:
“Every person who shall steal dr obtain by robbery the property of another in any other state, territory or country, and shall bring the same into this state, may be convicted and punished for larceny in the same manner as if such property had been feloniously stolen or taken within this state; and in any such cases the larceny may be charged to have been committed, and may be indicted and punished, in any county into or through which such stolen property shall have been brought.”
The gravamen of this offense is the bringing into this state of property which has been feloniously appropriated. Section 88 of the crimes act (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2076) makes the alteration of brands with intent to steal or convert the branded animal larceny. Such conduct, being a manifestly dangerous depredation upon the right of private property, is deemed by the legislature of this state meet for punishment in the same manner as an ordinary stealing, and no matter what may be the law of the place where an alteration of brands occurs, if the property then be brought into
“We have no doubt as to the power of the legislature to provide for the punishment of the offense defined by section 274 of the crimes, and punishment act, which consists, not in stealing property in another state or territory, but in bringing property thus feloniously taken within the limits and jurisdiction of this state, to the manifest detriment of the public morals. The original taking may have been a crime against the laws of the state where it was committed, but of that the laws of this state take no cognizance; but, surely, every civilized community must have the right to prevent its soil and territory from being converted to the vile uses of thieves and robbers, a receptacle of stolen goods, and to protect its citizens against the demoralizing effects of such depraved examples.” (McFarland v. The State, 4 Kan. 68, 74.)
The doctrine of this decision has been criticised as an unwarranted extension of the fiction of constructive larceny beyond the purpose for which it was originally intended (editorial note, 15 L. R. A. 722), and it does not obtain in some states; but its standing with the courts is fairly stated in the recent case of Barclay et al. v. The United States, 11 Okla. 503, 69 Pac. 798, as follows:
“It is well settled by the great weight of authority that we do not look to the law of the place from which the property was brought, nor to the common law, to determine the question of the larceny, but to our own statutes. We do not seek to punish for crime committed in the Indian Territory, but for a new offense committed in the Osage nation, in Oklahoma territory, and against the laws of Oklahoma. The question as to whether the original taking constituted larceny is to be determined by our own laws, and not by the laws of the place where the property was first taken. This principle is settled by the following authorities: People v. Burke, 11 Wend. 129; Murray v. State, 18 Ala.*662 731; People v. Staples, 91 Cal. 23, 27 Pac. 523; State v. Underwood, 49 Me. 181, 77 Am. Dec. 254; Worthington v. State, 58 Md. 403, 42 Am. Rep. 338; State v. Knief, 12 Mont. 92, 29 Pac. 654, 15 L. R. A. 722; Hemmaker v. State, 12 Mo. 454, 51 Am. Dec. 172; State v. Butler, 67 Mo. 61. The courts of the state of Ohio, Texas and Massachusetts have held to a different rule, but they are not sustained by the weight of authority.” .(Page 512.)
Pursuing further his line of argument, appellant says that the offense denounced by section 83 of the crimes act consists of certain enumerated elements which if relevant to his case should have been recited at length in the information, citing The State v. Bellamy, 63 Kan. 144, 65 Pac. 274, and other decisions of like.import. The suggestion would be more forceable if appellant had been on trial for altering brands with intent to steal or convert, but he was not. He was charged with, and tried for, the distinct offense of larceny committed in Kansas by bringing stolen property into the state, and by the express terms of section 285, supra, this crime may be charged in the information as simple larceny committed in this state. To convict under this statute the prosecution must establish larceny or robbery committed before the property is brought "into the state. Here larceny was shown by proof of alteration of brands with intent to steal and convert. The foundation was thus laid for punishing the unlawful asportation into this state, and the instruction was not only pertinent to material evidence but was correct.
Upon these propositions the decision in McFarland v. The State, 4 Kan. 68, is conclusive. The information was for taking, stealing and carrying away in the county of Leavenworth certain animals. The evidence was that the property was taken in Platte county, Missouri, and was found in the defendant’s possession in Leavenworth county, Kansas. In affirming a verdict of guilty of larceny the court said:
“The legislature of Kansas has not transcended its*663 legitimate authority in the enactment above cited. [Section 274, quoted above.] That act makes the retaining possession of the stolen property within this state equivalent to an original act of theft, and declares it may be punished in the sarnie manner as an original larceny. It régards every asportation of the property animo furandi as a new taking, and in this it but echoes the settled principles of the common law. . . . Second, as to the ruling of the court in admitting the evidence of the witness, Baldwin, we think it entirely unexceptionable, from the fact that it was necessary, first to prove the wrongful means by which McFarland came into possession of the property, before he could be punished for its continued wrongful possession.” (Page 75.)
The McFarland case has been cited with approval in The State v. Price, 55 Kan. 606, 609, 40 Pac. 1000, The State v. Wade, 55 Kan. 693, 41 Pac. 951, The State v. Suppe, 60 Kan. 566, 570, 57 Pac. 106, and in some other decisions.
The court instructed the jury upon the subject of the recent possession of stolen property as follows:
“The possession of stolen property recently after it has been stolen is prima facie evidence of guilt, and throws upon the possessor the burden of explaining his possession of the said stolen property, and if unexplained, or if his explanation is not satisfactory, it is sufficient of itself to warrant a conviction.”
Appellant duly excepted, and it may be conceded that the rule stated is subject to some criticism in view of the present state of the criminal law. Technically the unexplained possession of recently stolen property does not make a prima facie case of guilt. It is merely an evidential fact which should be submitted to the jury to be considered in connection with all other facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence, but which, if the jury so regard it, is sufficient to warrant a conviction; and technically, the burden of proof in a criminal case never shifts.
However, the instruction states the common law upon the subject. With some unimportant verbal changes
The court gave a brief instruction pointing out the necessity of additional evidence as the time of possession becomes remote from the stealing, which appellant says the jury may have taken as an addition to his burden, but the plain import of the language used is otherwise.
The court also gave an instruction relating to the sale or conversion, in violation of the rights of the owner, of property known by the brands to belong to another, which does hot specifically speak of felonious intent, but when considered as a whole and read with other instructions given its meaning is plain and could not have been misunderstood. Evidently it was not drawn under section 92 of the crimes act (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 2085), as appellant suggests.
The verdict is sustained by sufficient evidence, and the claimed variance between the information and the proof is unsubstantial.
The foregoing disposes of all assignments of error except those relating to testimony received and rejected. The court has not only examined each item of evidence presented but has carefully read the entire record. . To state its views upon the various rulings complained of would' require many pages of
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.