Flohr Et Ux. v. Territory of Oklahoma

1907 OK 110, 91 P. 712, 19 Okla. 414, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1907 OK 110 (Flohr Et Ux. v. Territory of Oklahoma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flohr Et Ux. v. Territory of Oklahoma, 1907 OK 110, 91 P. 712, 19 Okla. 414, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 214 (Okla. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Gillette, J.:

In order- to a consideration of this case, which is an appeal from an order overruling a motion for a new trial, made after the term when judgment was entered and sentence pronounced; upon the ground of newly discovered evidence, and in considering such motion and the ground laid therefor, it is necessary first to notice the defendants’ ground of defense on the trial of the cause. They were charged with larceny by stealth and fraud in the felonious taking of merchandise, the property of C. H. and Luella Richards, at Rusk, in Woods county, Oklahoma; the indictment setting out the time and place and the property alleged to have been stolen. When the case came on for trial the defense interposed and relied upon by the defendants was set out in a statement to the jury by one of defendants’ counsel, as shown by the record in the case, and was in substance that, *415 while defendants were absent from their home in the state of Kansas as witnesses in a cause pending against the complaining witnesses at Wichita, Kansas, a scheme was devised, planned, and executed for the purpose of having a continuance of the case, then and there pending against Eichards, and that during that time and for that purpose Eichards slipped down to Elohr’s place, in Woods county, Oklahoma, near Eusk, and in the night time secreted his (Eichards) property upon Elohr’s place, and the next morning sent an officer there and had him find the property so secreted. The property alleged to have been stolen was set out in the indictment, and a description of it required fourteen pages of closely typewritten matter, a large portion of which was recovered by a writ of replevin. Such a defense to an indictment charging the larceny of such property by fraud and stealth precludes the theory that Elohr and his wife had the possession of the property at his home at all, but substantially avers that, when-the same was found there, it was by reason of the fraudulent and vicious act of Eichards in secreting it there without his (Elohr’s) knowledge or consent, and during his and his wife’s absence from home

The evidence, upon the trial of the case showed that the property, when found at his place, was secreted in different portions of the house; some of it in the back part of and inside an organ, and some in the attic of the building; that, when Dr. Eichards and his wife left Eusk, they left the key to their place of business with one Chamberlain, and that Elohr obtained possession of it from him by writing Eichards, who was then in Illinois, that Chamberlain was disposing of the property and was not caring for it, and that if he (Elohr) had possession of it he would take good care of the same. Thereupon Eichards telegraphed to Chamberlain to turn the key over to Elohr. Chamberlain testified that upon receipt of such telegram he did turn the keys over to Elohr. The testimony of Elohr himself upon the trial of the case upon cross-examination showed that he procured the keys and *416 possession of the store from Chamberlain; that he lived some ten miles from Rusk, and had no opportunity to know what Chamberlain’s acts were, and that such statements written to Richards were made in the consciousness that he did not know the facts. In this way the evidence for the prosecution upon the trial of the cause accounted for the ability of Flohr to have gotten possession of the property charged to have been fraudulently stolen. From this it will appear that Flohr’s possession of the property was, upon the trial, accounted for by each side upon theories that were directly antagonistic; upon the part of the territory by proof tending to establish a fraudulent larceny of the same, and by the defendant’s attempting to show that the property was frudulently taken to his premises by Richards with a view of accusing him of the larceny thereof. These conflicting theories were settled by the verdict of the jury against the Flohrs.

Upon this motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence it is proposed to show as a matter of defense to the charge of larceny in the indictment that the property charged to have been stolen, and which was found secreted at Flohr’s house, was there by- the mutual consent of the parties, through an alleged credit statement made by Dr. Richards to a business house in Wichita, Kansas, to which credit statement there was attached a written exhibit, and in which exhibit appears the following:

“I instructed Mr. Flohr, who had the keys to the store while I was away, to take all the jewelry and silverware in the store to his place, and I kept the most expensive jewelry and silverware, including * * * I also gave him or sent him keys to my trunk where good gold watches and rings, etc., * * * and told him to take it out and put in security somewhere, in case of fire or robberj" or burglary. He took .all this including the musical instruments, silver mounted ebony brushes, and silver mounted combs, the best of the fancy chinaware, perfumes and some other things up to his house for safe keeking. I should think he has about a $1,000 or $1,200 worth of goods in this line at his place.”

*417 This written statement is attached to 'the credit statement without any reference in the credit statement to the same, the person making it averring that, when Richards made it, he (Richards) said he -would make a more complete property statement, which he afterwards did, and handed him the statement containing the language above quoted. The execution and delivery of this statement is positively denied by Richards and his wife, who also deny that the same is in the handwriting of either tof them. The authenticity of this newly discovered evidence is, -therefore, placed in much doubt, judging the same from the basis of the motion for a new trial alone. And it seems to us, when" considered in connection with the defense made by Flohr upon the trial of the cause, it is so fully discredited as to justify the trial court in refusing to grant a new trial based thereon.

The defense now proposed, that Flohr received these goods under the direction of Richards and took them from the store to-his dwelling house, eleven miles distant, is at direct variance with the defense stated at the beginning of the trial, to-wit, that Dr. Richards had, while he (Flohr) was absent from home in Wichita, slipped down there and secreted them in the house for the purpose of accusing him of the larceny of them. The motion for a new trial, if granted for such a reason, would be equivalent to authorizing a new trial upon such separate and distinct grounds as to permit the defendant to confess that he had originally defended the case upon false and malicious grounds, wherein he sought to charge Dr. Richards with an offense more heinous than the one charged in the indictment against himself, and, having been defeated in such falsehood, he now seeks to present the truth. Courts will not permit litigants to aver a given statement of facts to be true, and, when defeated in such averment, to have another trial upon a theory which confesses the first to have been falsely presented.

There is one other matter presented by the record deserving of notice. In the credit statement made at Wichita, Richards in the *418

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Related

Byers v. Territory
100 P. 261 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1907 OK 110, 91 P. 712, 19 Okla. 414, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flohr-et-ux-v-territory-of-oklahoma-okla-1907.