30 Tex. Ct. App. 308 | Tex. App. | 1891
It is a general rule with regard to indictments for theft that the allegation of ownership of the stolen property, being descriptive of the offense, must be proved as alleged. This applies especially to the allegation of the name of the injured party. Our statute expressly provides, that in alleging the name of any person necessary to be stated in an indictment it shall be sufficient to state one or more of the initials of the Christian name and the surname, but when a person is known by two or more names it shall be sufficient to state either name. Code Crim. Proc., art. 425. The name of the alleged owner of the stolen animal, as stated in the indictment in this case, is Jesus Garcia. Defendant endeavored to show that this was not the
In brief, the evidence upon this point was, that the owner, who was a witness, testified: “My name is Jesus Bascus. I was born and raised in Mexico. My father’s name is Jesus Garcia and my mother’s name was-Bascus, and I took my mother’s name Bascus, and my name is Jesus Garcia Bascus.” It was proved by other witnesses in the case that the owner, when rendering his property for taxes, had rendered it in the name of Jesus Garcia; that his name had been entered by a party who hired him, in a book which contained a list of the hands, as Jesus Garcia; and that upon the morning of the day of the trial he told the district judge who presided at the trial that his name was Jesus Garcia. The further evidence as to the other name was the introduction by the defendant of a bill of sale from one Carson to him (Garcia) for the horse in question, in which his name is stated to be Kasus Baskes. This bill of sale has no date to it, and there is no evidence tending to show when it was executed. Other evidence in the case shows that the party had owned and been in possession of the horse for some time prior to the theft. All the witnesses who testified in the case as to the name of the owner stated that they did not know what his surname was; they only knew him by his Christian name Jesus. As to the two surnames, it seems the party was not known either by one or the other. The indictment alleged his surname as that of his father, while the party himself claimed, in addition to his Christian name, the surnames both of father and mother. He was not commonly known or called by either name. We think the indictment sufficiently alleges the surname or family name when it alleges the name of the father, that being the proper surname in this country in contemplation of law. Upon this point, from the facts shown in the record, we are of opinion that there is no variance between the name of the owner as alleged in the indictment and that proved on the trial.
The principal inculpatory evidence against this defendant was that of an accomplice, one Bradley, who testified that the animal was stolen on Sunday night, and all of the circumstances testified by other witnesses tending to corroborate the accomplice’s testimony relate in the main to facts and circumstances which transpired on said Sunday night. The owner of the alleged stolen animal, in his testimony, states that he fed his horse on Monday morning, and that that was the last time that he saw him. In this connection he also testified, that there were two other Mexicans, whom he named, who were present at the time, and saw him feed the horse on Monday morning. Other evidence in the case tends to show that if defendant did not steal the horse on Sunday night he was not and could not have been the party who stole him afterward. In his motion for a new trial one of the grounds in the mo
Reversed and remanded.
Hurt, J., absent.