| Fla. | Jan 15, 1885

Mr. Justice YanYalkenburgh

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the spring term of the Circuit Court held in and for Marion county in 1884, the plaintiff in error, James Washington, was indicted under the statute of 1883, chapter 3463, for breaking and entering a building, to wit: a meat house of Lorenzo D. Geiger, with intent to steal and carry *329away property of less than the value of twenty dollars. The allegation is that the breaking was in the night time. There is no allegatión that any of the property was stolen or any larceny committed. This indictment was endorsed with the printed words: “ A true bill,” signed “ Francis E. Harris, Foreman.” Defendant’s counsel moved to quash the indictment upon the following grounds:

1st.' The indictment does not allege a burglarious breaking.

2d. The words, a true bill, are not endorsed upon the back of the indictment by the foreman of the grand jury, in writing.

3d. That the foreman of the grand jury does not sign his name as foreman of the grand jury, but said bill is simply endorsed: “ F. E. Harris, Foreman.”

This motion to quash was properly overruled by the court. See Tilly vs. The State, decided at this term of the court, 21 Fla.

The defendant was tried and found guilty. Counsel for defendant then moves in “ arrest of judgment, and for a new trial.” The grounds alleged are as follows :

“Because the verdict of the jury was contrary to the evidence, the weight of evidence, and without any evidence to support it,” and second: “because the indictment is so vague, uncertain and defective that the motion ore tenus to quash the same should have been granted, and the defendant now shows to the court such defects in the indictment in order that judgment may be arrested, viz: that such indictment does not allege, ‘ a burglarious breaking and entering ’; that the words, a true bill are not endorsed upon the back of the said indictment by the foreman of the grand jury, in writing; that the foreman of the grand jury does not sign his name as foreman of the grand jury, but said bill is simply endorsed, ‘ F. E. Harris, Foreman.’ ”

*330This motion was overruled and exception taken.

The defendant’s counsel asked the court to charge the jury as follows:

1st. That the mere possession of the stolen goods unaccompanied with other suspicious circumstances, is not evidence sufficient to convict of breaking and entering a building.

2d. Possession of stolen goods may be evidence of larceny, but not of breaking and entering a building, which is the gist of this case.

3d. The jury must give the defendant the benefit of any reasonable doubt derived from the evidence.

The court refused to give the first and second above mentioned requested charges, and gave the one numbered three.

The assignments of error cover substantially the points made above by the counsel for the defendant.

The proof on the trial of the cause shows no breaking or entering a building of any kind with intent, &c. The evidence of L. D. Geiger, as appears in the record, recites “that on the 13 th day of January last, my meat house was broken into in the night time; it was locked with a padlock, the staple was broken and the meat gone—sides and shoulders ; I got a search warrant and searched the house of the prisoner on the 15th day of January; found nothing there; we then went to a new house about a mile distant, into which prisoner was moving; this was a house into which prisoner was moving, about two and a half miles from mine. Mr. Carter, the constable, searched about the house but found nothing there, but in a hammock, about 75 or 100 yards from the house, he found four sides of meat hid in a hollow stump. The stump was in sight of the new house.' The meat would weigh about 25 pounds to the piece; was worth about fifteen cents per *331pound. The meat was my meat. The prisoner and Alexander, about a week before my meat house was broken open, helped me to kill hogs which made this meat, also helped me - pack it away, and was entirely familiar with the location of the meat house and my premises.”

Mr. Carter testified: “ I acted as constable to search the houses of Washington and Alexander; I found the meat in a stump just seventy-seven steps from a new house the prisoner was building and into which he was moving that day. This stump in which I found the four pieces of meat was on the path leading from prisoner’s new house to the pond where he got water, and in full view of thfe. house. The prisoner said he had been working there on the previous Saturday. I saw tracks leading from the new house by the stump to the pond. He, Washington, did not live there but was moving into the new house that day. He resided about a mile from there. • After finding the meat I arrested him on the road with his cart hauling plunder to the new house. He did not claim the meat; said it was not his; that he had no meat on his premises. I searched Alexander’s house, found ho meat there. Alexander lived between the place where the meat was found and the house occupied by the defendant and about three-quarters of a mile away ; saw no peculiarity about the meat; it was such meat as is generally raised and cured in that neighborhood. Mr. Geiger identified the meat as his.”

This is all the evidence upon the part of the State, and yet the jury found the prisoner guilty of feloniously and wilfully breaking and entering a building, to wit: a meat house of Lorenzo D. Geiger with intent the goods, chattels and property in the said building then and there being of less than the value of twenty dollars to steal and carry away. There is no evidence tending to show any breaking or éntering or stealing (which last is not charged in the in*332•dictment) done by the prisoner, or of his being in possession or having the control of any property which was in the building, when so broken and entered. So far as the proof is concerned the neighbors who lived in the same vicinity •might with equal propriety have been indicted and convicted. Uor is this all the evidence. The defendant called upon Mollie Alexander, who testified in his behalf as follows :

“ I remember the night Mr. Geiger’s meat is said to have been stolen. It was on the second Sunday night in January. I remember it because I heard of it on the next day when Washington was arrested. I know where Washington was that night; he and his wife were at my house, his wife went to church and he remained at my house. Washington slept at my house that night; he went to bed about twelve o’clock and did not get up next morning until after sunrise ; I had to wake him up. He went to bed before I did, about seven o’clock. His wife returned from church about 12 o’clock. I got up and opened the door for her. Washington got up also. We built up a large fire and sat up for an hour or more. Washington did not leave the house that night that I know of. The house had but the one room. I don’t think he could have left the house without my knowing it.”

The defendant then was sworn and made his statement as follows: “ I did not break or enter the house of Mr. Geiger or take his meat. On that night I was at the house. I stayed there all night, didn’t even go to church. I am not a man who runs about after night. I didn’t hide the meat in the woods and know nothing at all about it.”

Uo possession of the alleged stolen property was proven in the defendant, and therefore the court did not err in refusing to charge upon that point.

A new trial should have been granted on the first ground *333mentioned in his motion for the same “ because the verdict of the jury wa,s contrary to the evidence, the weight of evidence and without any evidence to support it.”

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.

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