194 Iowa 446 | Iowa | 1922
The plaintiff was the owner of a certain Cole
Answering the petition, defendant admits the issuance of the policy, and receipt of the notice and proofs of the alleged loss of the car, but denies all other allegations.
On the trial of the issues to the jury, plaintiff offered evidence tending to show his delivery of the ear to one Quigley, proprietor of a garage at Cedar Rapids, with directions to have a glass put into one of the curtains. Quigley, acting upon plaintiff’s request, took the car to the upholstering department of another shop, conducted by one Beck, and left it inside the building used for that purpose, in the care of one Gibbs, an employee of Beck’s, who had charge of the work. This was on a Saturday afternoon. Gibbs closed and locked the shop after the car was delivered there. On his return to his work on Monday morning following, the car was gone. He had given no one permission to take it. "Weir, the owner, had not taken the car out or authorized anyone else to do so. The only other persons having any apparent authority in the premises were one Harper, who did the painting work in the shop, and his assistant, Robert Melsha. According to Harper, he remained in the shop after Melsha had received his week’s pay and quit for the day, and the witness himself left a little before Gibbs did. The car was then still in the shop. Harper neither moved the car nor authorized Melsha or any other person to do so. On Monday or Tues
II. Defendant requested the court to instruct the jury as follows:
“Par. 2. Testimony has been offered by the defendant that the automobile in question-was taken by one Robert Melsha, with the permission of one Frank Harper, who was connected with the repair shop where the car was left for repairs by an agent of the owner. To constitute larceny, the taking must have been without color of right or excuse for the act; and if you find that Melsha took this ear under a claim of right, and with a fair
“Par. 4. As bearing upon Melsha’s intent at the time of taking the ear, you should also consider the manner of the taking and the conduct, of Melsha with reference to the car after the taking. If the taking was open and notorious, the presumption is against the intent to steal, and it is your duty to find for the defendant, unless the plaintiff convinces you by a preponderance of the positive evidence that there was a criminal intent,'— that is, an intent to steal.”
This request was denied by the court. In the charge given by the court on its own motion, the jury was clearly instructed as to the elements constituting larceny, and upon the subject covered by defendant’s request, the court said as follows:
“Instruction No. 4. You are instructed that, while Robert Melsha was permitted to testify as to the intent with which he took the plaintiff’s automobile, the fact that he testifies that he did not have a felonious intent at the time he took it, and further testifies that he intended to return it, is not conclusive of what his real purpose and intent was. The intent with which an act is done is to be determined from all the facts and circumstances attending the doing of the act charged, as disclosed by the evidence; and it is for you to determine from all the evidence, including the evidence of Melsha, whether or not his act in taking the plaintiff’s automobile was unlawful and felonious, and was done with the then intent on his part to appropriate the same to his own use, and wholly and permanently deprive the plaintiff of said automobile.
“Instruction No. 6. If you find from the evidence that it was the intention of Melsha to return the car to the garage from which it was taken, after he used it on Sunday, even though such intention was never carried out, then the crime of larceny was not 'committed, and if you so find, you should find for the defendant; but if you find, from all of the evidence and all of the facts and circumstances shown by the evidence, that
“Instruction No. 7. As bearing upon Melsha’s intent at the time of taking the car, you should also consider the manner of the taking, — whether it was openly or secretly taken, — the conduct of Melsha with reference to the use of the car after he took it, and all the other facts and circumstances shown by the evidence, bearing upon the question of whether the crime of larceny was or was not committed by Melsha in the taking of said car.
“Instruction No. 8.' You are further instructed that the mere possession of the plaintiff’s car by Melsha does not, alone and of itself, raise the presumption that a larceny was committed by him. The burden of proof remains with the plaintiff to show, 'by a preponderance of the evidence, that the car was taken by Melsha with a criminal intent on his part to steal the ear. ’ ’
The court’s charge, as will thus be seen, fully and fairly covered the subject of the defendant’s request, and the refusal of such request is manifestly without prejudicial error.
III. Exception was preserved to the admission of testimony of two witnesses who undertook to relate what took place at the scene of the wreck on the Sunday after the accident. These witnesses and Melsha and others appear to have gathered there to look at the ruins of the car, which still remained in the ditch. In the talk, there was something said by one of the witnesses to the effect that he had bought or contemplated buying the injured car, and that some parts or attachments of the ear were then removed, in Melsha’s presence. The story of this occurrence is by no means clear; but we do not see anything in it which could work to the prejudice of the defendant, and the assignment of error upon its admission is overruled.
We have examined the case of Valley Merc. Co. v. St. Paul F. & M. Ins. Co., 49 Mont. 430, on which the defense largely
There is no reversible error in, the record, and the judgment of the district court is — Affirmed.