The defendant and another were jointly charged with burglary under an indictment alleging that they entered the dwelling house of one Rogers with intent to commit a theft and carried away certain described property of Rogers with the intention of depriving said owner of his property. Upon the trial of the case he contended that he had purchased some of the property from an unidentified person some days previously. The State’s evidence was sufficient to establish a breaking and entry shortly before the defendants were apprehended nearby with the property, and ownership in Rogers. Wells appeals on the sole ground that receiving stolen goods is a lesser offense than burglary and should under the evidence have been included in the charge to the jury. Held:
"It is an elementary principle of criminal procedure that no person can be convicted of any offense not charged in the indictment. There may, of course, be a conviction of a lesser offense than that expressly named in the indictment, where the former is necessarily included in the latter, and also in some cases in which the lesser is not so included in the greater offense but where the language used in the indictment is sufficient to embrace the smaller offense.”
Goldin v. State,
charge the lesser offense; otherwise, not.
Andrews v. State,
The gravamen of the offense of receiving stolen goods is that the defendant purchased or obtained them from a third person, knowing at the time that they had been stolen by another.
Austin v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
