65 Neb. 223 | Neb. | 1902
The plaintiffs in error, McLaughlin and Van Burén, who were defendants in the trial court, were informed against and by the verdict of a jury found guilty of stealing a mare of the value of $15, the personal property of one John Ray; the larceny charged being alleged to have been committed in Cherry county. After the overruling of a motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment, the defendants were sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a period of seven and five years, respectively, and adjudged to pay the costs of prosecution. By proceedings in error the defendants bring the record of conviction here for review. Many alleged errors are assigned as grounds for reversal of the judgment of the trial court, a few only of which will be noticed and considered.
The preliminary examination for the purpose of inquiring whether an offense had been committed, and whether there was probable cause to believe the defendants guilty thereof, was had before the judge of the district court sitting as an examining magistrate. It appears from the record that a complaint charging the defendants with the crime, of which they were after-wards convicted in the district court, was filed with the county judge of Cherry county, who issued a warrant thereon and after the arrest of the defendants, and their appearance before him, on their application, granted a continuance of the hearing on the complaint charging them with the commission of the alleged offense, for a period of thirty days, whereupon another complaint, charging the same offense, was filed with a justice of the peace acting as an examining magistrate, upon which a warrant was issued, and the defendants brought before him for a preliminary hearing. On the
As to the authority of the district judge to sit as an examining magistrate, and require persons accused of crime to enter into a recognizance for their appearance in the district court to answer the crime charged against them, or, in default thereof, to commit them to prison in order to secure their presence in the district court to answer such charge, we think this must be answered in the affirmative, under the provisions of section 262 of the Criminal Code. It is there provided: “The judges of the district courts in their respective districts, and the magistrates mentioned in section tw7o hundred and sixty, in their respective counties, shall jointly and severally be conservators of the peace wdthin their respective jurisdictions, and shall have full power to enforce or cause to be enforced all laws that now exist or that shall hereafter be made for the prevention and punishment of offenses, or for the preservation and observance of the peace. The said judges of the district courts shall have the same powers to require securities for the keeping of the peace, and the good behavior, and bail for appearance in courts to answrer complaints to keep the peace, and for crimes and offenses committed in their respective districts as any of the magistrates aforesaid have in their respective counties.” This section gives ample authority to the district judge within his district for the exercise of the same powers as examining magistrates generally in the examination of persons accused of crime, and to require their commitment or admission to bail to answ7er in the district court the charges preferred against them. State v. Dennison, 60 Nebr., 192.
On the trial of the case in the district court there w7as evidence introduced tending to establish the fact that the mare, if stolen at all, w7as stolen in the state of South Da
The instruction copied in the opinion being prejudicially erroneous, and authorizing a conviction where no
Eeversed and remanded.
Note. — Larceny—Asportation from One State to Another. — A thief, who steals goods in another state and sends them into Massachusetts by an agent, not an accomplice in the theft, may be indicted for larceny in the latter state. Commonwealth v. White, 123 Mass., 430. Similar indictments have been upheld in State v. Ellis, 3 Conn., 185; Cummings v. State, 1 Harr. & J. [Md.], 340; Hamilton v. State, 11 Ohio St., 435; State v. Bartlett, 11 Vt., 650. Contra: People v. Gardner, 2 Johns. [N. Y.], 477; People v. Schenck, 2 Johns. [N. Y.], 479; State v. Brown, Haywood [N. Car.], 100; Simmons v. Commonwealth, 5 Bin. [Pa.], 617— in which the English doctrine is discussed at great length; Simpson v. State, 4 Humph. [Tenn.], 455 — changed by statute, Tenn. Code, sec. 4977; Henry v. State, 7 Coldw. [Tenn.], 333. — W. F. B.