Conner v. State

1939 OK CR 34, 89 P.2d 991, 66 Okla. Crim. 89, 1939 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 21, 1939
DocketNo. A-9552.
StatusPublished

This text of 1939 OK CR 34 (Conner v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conner v. State, 1939 OK CR 34, 89 P.2d 991, 66 Okla. Crim. 89, 1939 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 38 (Okla. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The defendant, B. C. Conner, was by information charged with the larceny of one animal of the bovine species, a bull, belonging to J. W. Ardrey, was tried in the district court of Stephens county, convicted, and sentenced to serve a term in the state penitentiary of five years. Motion for a new trial was filed, considered, overruled, exceptions saved, and the defendant has appealed.

J. W. Ardrey states:

“I live 20 miles east and three miles south of Marlow, engaged in farming. About the 13th of October, 1937, I was the owner of a bull, a white faced bull. The bull was not in good shape, weighed about 600 pounds, would be my guess, kinda’ pale red, white faced bull, and didn’t have any horns, had a ‘Y’ brand run on it. I last saw the bull on the 6th of October, 1937. At that time he was there around the place with my cows. When I missed him I began searching for him; on the 18th day of October, 1937, I heard of him. He was supposed to have been seen on the 12th. I never did find the bull. I went to Oklahoma City, but I did not find him alive. I found the hide of the bull in a hide house there in Oklahoma City. It was known as the *91 Gruendler Hide House. Brooks Hervey and my boy was with me, and also Mr. Jones. We found a record where he had been sold to the butcher. We went to the hide house, and the hides was removed by some negroes into stacks. I examined each hide as they pitched them out. I watched for the flesh marks on the hide. The hide, here, is the hide we found in the hide house. I identified it as the hide off my bull. I examined it first for flesh marks. Yes, sir, this is the hide that came off my bull. The negroes handled about 437 hides before they came to this one. This bull of mine was darker in front, and had a little white spot, here, by his shoulder, and a little white spot back there (indicating). He was a bull I had raised. The hide at the time we found it was more pliable than it is now. It was stretched out, the brand kinda’ like this (pointing it out to the jury), Right there is the brand. At that time the hide was soft. I have used that brand for about twelve years. I placed the brand on the left side behind the left shoulder of the animal, and that is where this bull was branded. He was about six or eight months old when he was branded. He was branded at Jess Gann’s. Jess run the brand on him. My son and several others were there at the time. Mr. Gann was also branding some of his cattle. I did not give any one permission to take that bull away from my premises, nor did I give any one permission to take it to Oklahoma City.”

On cross-examination the witness stated in substance the same facts that he had stated on his direct examination.

Bryant Ardrey, his son, stated that he was twelve years of age, lived with his father, that he was in the eighth grade in school, he knew the bull his father had raised, and in substance stated that he went with Mr. Hervey and his father to the hide house where they located the hide which he claims, and the hide which had been taken from the bull of his father’s that was missing. The hide was soft at the time they saw it. He also testified as to the fact of the bull being branded by Mr. Gann, and identified the hide taken from the hide house as belonging to his father’s bull.

Earnest Ruth, testifying on behalf of the state, stated:

“I live 21 miles east of Marlow, about 100 yards off the highway. I know Mr. Ardrey. I live about two miles *92 from Mr. Ardrey northwest, I mean southwest. I know Buster Conner. He lives northwest of me. It is a mile north of where I live, where you turn to go towards Buster Conner’s place. Going from my place to Buster’s, I go a mile north and then back west. On the 12th of October, 1937, I was pulling bollies just west of the section line. I fixed the day, because I was expecting to go to work on the road, and I noticed the calendar, and wanted to see how long I had to pull bollies, and I noticed the calendar, and it was the 12th. I saw a bull about 4:00 o’clock in the afternoon of the 12th of October, 1937. He came to our place with our cows. When our cows went into the pasture he tore through the stalk field. I heard him bawling; I looked over there; I couldn’t tell whose bull it was. I saw Mr. Ardrey in a few days. It looked something like Mr. Ardrey’s bull. I never saw the bull after that afternoon. I told Mr. Ardrey a few days after that where I had seen the bull. I live around two miles from Buster Conner’s; but across the section line straight across, it would be about a mile and one half. When I saw the bull he was coming from the west. I live one mile from the Stephens county line, in Stephens county.”

On cross-examination the witness stated he could not tell whose bull it was, that when he first saw the bull he was on the main highway, “The last time I saw him, he was going east.”

Cleo Ruth, testifying for the state, stated that he was 20 years of age, living in the Burrows High neighborhood.

“I know J. W. Ardrey. I know Buster Conner. The road Buster travels coming down to the section line is just west of our place. I was pulling bollies that afternoon with my brother Earnest. The way I fix the date, my brother was supposed to go to work the 20th. We were looking at the calendar that day, and it was the 12th. We were pulling bollies about a quarter of a mile from the highway. One of our cows had been missing, and I saw her coming down the road, and I saw the bull with her, and I called my brother’s attention to that fact at the time. I took it to be Mr. Ardrey’s bull. I have never seen that bull since that afternoon.”

Brooks Hervey, testifying for the state, stated:

*93 “My name is Brooks Hervey. I am sheriff of Stephens county. Mr. Ardrey came to my house and talked to me about a bull that he had lost or had disappeared. I went with Mr. Ardrey to Oklahoma City; I made three trips. I was at the hide house with Mr. Ardrey and his son when the hides were examined. They moved something like four hundred or more before they came to a hide that Mr. Ardrey identified by the flesh marks and brand mark as being the hide off his bull.”

Several documents, including the truck waybill and the document purporting to be signed by B. C. Conner at the time the bull was delivered to the stockyards and other documents that the defendant had signed at different places on legal documents, were exhibited to B. B. Hickman, who is admitted to be qualified as an examiner of questioned documents, and Mr. Hickman, after carefully examining the different- documents presented to him, and after having taken the most of them through his laboratory where he had the signatures enlarged, testified positively that the signatures on the papers at the stockyards, in his opinion, were the same signature as B. C. Conner’s in the documents presented for identification.

The foregoing is the substance of the testimony for the state.

The defense of the ■ defendant is in the nature of an alibi.

Mrs. B. C. Conner, wife of the defendant, testifying for the defendant, stated that she and B. C. Conner had been married nearly 12 years. Buster did not go to Oklahoma City on the night of the 12th of October, 1937.

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1934 OK CR 66 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1934)
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Kimbrough v. State
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Wilson v. State
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Underwood v. State
1926 OK CR 415 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1939 OK CR 34, 89 P.2d 991, 66 Okla. Crim. 89, 1939 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conner-v-state-oklacrimapp-1939.