86 P. 53 | Idaho | 1906
Lead Opinion
The defendant was charged with the larceny of one gray horse colt, the property of Henry S. Woodland. On his trial he was convicted of the crime of grand larceny and thereafter sentenced to serve a term of three years in the state penitentiary. A motion for a new trial was filed and denied. The appeal is from the judgment as well as from the order overruling the motion for new trial. 'The record discloses five assignments of error as follows: 1. “The court erred in denying appellant’s motion for a new trial for the reason’ that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and wholly insufficient - to support the ver
It will be observed that the assignments above quoted largely refer to the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. Learned counsel who made the oral argument in this court on behalf of the appellant with commendable ability and, we are satisfied, the best of faith, insisted that the evidence was not of a character that should warrant a conviction. There is no claim of conflicting evidence disclosed by the record. The possession is not questioned. That appellant took the colt alleged to have been stolen from the range or a pasture that seems to be somewhat of a public one known as the “Asylum” pasture, near the town of Blackfoot, to his own premises a short distance from the pasture, and branded it with his own brand, is admitted by appellant. That the colt was taken from the pasture by appellant and his three sons about 9 o’clock in the morning, and driven along a well-traveled highway to the premises of appellant, where it was branded, is not contradicted. With these undisputed facts before the jury, it was only necessary for it to determine appellant’s good faith in branding the colt in controversy. It is shown by the record that appellant claimed to have traded for a gray horse colt and a brown mare colt in the fall of 1904, with a man by the name of Weaver, and that he kept them on his premises during the winter of 1904-05. He says he took possession of them in September, 1904, and last saw them about the middle of April, 1905. He further says that the reason he did not see
Tom Lyons testified he had lived in Blackfoot twenty-two years. VI ride the range for myself.....I have seen on his place a gray and brown colt. I last saw them' last spring somewhere about the 1st of April. I did not take particular notice of them. I could not describe them in any respect no more than one was gray and the other was brown. I know the gray one was a horse. ’ ’
In rebuttal, George S. Davis testified: “I am familiar with the stock of defendant and have been for two years. I saw his horses during that time nearly every day. Their pasture joins my pasture. I never saw in the defendant’s pasture or under his control two colts similar to the colts in question. I never saw a gray colt. I never saw a brown mare colt in his possession, similar to the brown mare colt I testified to.”
Charles Sims testified he was acquainted- with the brown mare colt claimed by the prosecuting witness. “I have been acquainted with it since it was foaled. I owned the mother of the colt. I owned it until January. I parted with title of the colt to Mr. Woodland.”
The prosecution had traced the ownership and possession of the colts- from the time they were foaled down to the time they were branded by appellant, and we think sufficiently to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the gray colt was
There is no complaint on behalf of counsel for appellant that the instructions given by the court were not fair and
The third assignment is based on the refusal of the court to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. Several affidavits are filed in support of this application, as well as a number in many respects contradicting statements contained in the affidavits in support of the application.
Evaline Wilde, a girl eleven years old at the time she makes the affidavit, testifies that in the fall of 1904 she saw two colts running in the pasture of appellant; that they frequently got into the field of her father, who lives near the Williams’ farm, or did at that time; that at frequent intervals she, with others, had occasion to drive the colts out of her father’s field; that on one occasion the brown colt attempted to jump a barbed-wire fence and hung on the wires and cut its leg — she thinks the hind one. She describes the colts as one a gray and the other a brown.
A. O. Belleville testified that he had a horse in the pasture of appellant in the fall of 1904, and on different occasions visited the pasture to see how his horse was doing; that he noticed in the pasture a gray colt; also a brown one; and that the brown colt had a bad cut near the hock joint on one óf its hind legs which caused it to hobble as it walked, and that he paid particular attention to said colts on account of the severity of said cut. Other witnesses testified to seeing colts, a gray and brown, on the premises of appellant in the fall of 1904. In rebuttal of these affidavits, a number
In State v. Hardy, 4 Idaho, 476, 42 Pac. 507, this court said: “Affidavits alleging newly discovered evidence are of no avail when it appears that such evidence simply tends to the impeachment or contradiction of witnesses upon immaterial matters.” See, also, People v. Biles, 2 Idaho, 114, 6 Pac. 120; State v. Davis, 6 Idaho, 159, 53 Pac. 678, in which the question of newly discovered evidence is discussed.
There is no merit in appellant’s sixth assignment that “the court erred in passing sentence and rendering judgment, for the reason that the information does not allege facts sufficient to constitute a public offense.” It is urged that the charge being the larceny of ‘! one gray horse colt, ” it is not included within the term “grand larceny” as defined by section 7048, Revised Statutes, which provides, among other things, the taking a “horse, mare, gelding,” etc. It is .said “the section by implication excludes colts from the list.” We do not so construe this section of the statute. In order to constitute grand larceny, the felonious taking of any domestic animal constitutes the crime without regard to value, and the word “colt” merely described the age of the animal. If it were true, as urged by counsel for appellant, that for the reason the statute does not in words mention a colt, the taking is not larceny, one might steal a band of them, or a band of lambs,
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting. — It is difficult to understand how a jury, uninfluenced by anything other than the evidence that appears in this record, could have returned a verdict of conviction. But conceding the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, the defendant on his motion for a new trial has produced affidavits of witnesses that it is clearly shown he knew nothing of prior to the trial, which affidavits show facts most material to his defense. The theory of the state all the way through the case appears to have been that the defendant never, in fact, owned the two animals he claimed to have lost, and that he claims to have taken up and branded. The affidavits on motion for a new trial show quite conelusively that the defendant did have two such animals, and that the resemblance was so marked that some of the witnesses were unable to distinguish between them. This was shown by as many as five witnesses. One witness, Thomas Hines, testified to having told the prosecutor that he would testify to these facts soon after defendant’s arrest, and he went with the prosecutor to see the animals and called his attention to the marked resemblance; but defendant does not appear to have been apprised of this until after the trial, when he sent his attorney to Chehalis, Washington, to interview the witness. Evaline Wilde, a child of eleven years old, makes affidavit that during the fall of 1904 these colts got into her father’s field, and that she drove them out, and the brown colt cut its leg on the barbed wire. This was a most material fact, as the defendant had identified the animal by this wire cut. It is also strange that the prosecuting witnesses themselves had never noticed this wire cut on the animal until the defense called their attention to it. It shows how easily witnesses can be mistaken in their identification of growing range animals. With this showing it seems to me that a new trial ought