Grimsley v. State

60 So. 2d 509, 215 Miss. 43, 2 Adv. S. 20, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 535
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1952
DocketNo. 38442
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 60 So. 2d 509 (Grimsley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grimsley v. State, 60 So. 2d 509, 215 Miss. 43, 2 Adv. S. 20, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 535 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

This is an appeal from a conviction of the crime of grand larceny. On July 6, 1950, the appellant, Mrs. Betty Grimsley, was jointly indicted with her husband, Charlie Grimsley, and Olsen Grady and Sam Lucas, Jr., for the theft of ‘ ‘ one and 80/100ths cords of peeled pine masonite pulpwood in five foot six inch lengths of the value of $28.80 . . . the personal property of W. M. Thrower. . . .”

In August, 1950, the case was transferred by the circuit court to the county court for trial. On September 29, 1950, the indictment was amended on motion of the state and by written order then duly entered on the minutes of the county court, as required by law, so as to charge the defendant with the theft of “one and 80/100ths units of peeled pine masonite pulpwood in five foot three inch lengths of the value of $28.80, . . . the personal property of Richton Tie & Timber Company, a corporation, . . .”

On September 30, 1950, the appellant was separately tried and convicted on the original indictment as thus amended. She thereupon appealed the case to this Court and obtained a reversal thereof on the ground that the jurors had been permitted by a bailiff to become separated during a recess hour of the trial and to mingle and converse with other persons in violation of the rule in regard thereto which obtains in a felony prosecution. Other errors were assigned on that appeal, but the decision was based solely on the ground above stated. Mrs. Betty Grimsley v. State, 212 Miss. 229, 54 So. 2d 277.

Upon the remand of the case for a new trial, which was had on December 3rd and 4th, 1951, resulting in a [46]*46second conviction, it appears that the original indictment, as amended, had been lost pending the former appeal and the appellant was tried on a copy thereof. The copy was not a certified one as contemplated by Section 2442, Code of 1942, which declares, among other things, that “if an indictment be lost or destroyed, the accused may be tried on a certified copy made from the secret record book” of indictments in the office of the clerk of the circuit court.

(Hn 1) It is assigned for error on this appeal that the copy of the indictment on which the appellant was tried in December, 1951, was not a certified one. However, the accused made no objection to going to trial on. a mere purported copy of the original indictment without the same being certified to. Nor did she object to the introduction of testimony by the State to sustain the allegations of the copy of the indictment on which she was being tried. This omission of the clerk to certify the copy was an amendable defect which was waived by the failure of the accused to object to being put to trial thereon.

The copy of the indictment having been taken from the secret record book of indictments did not disclose the amendment made on the face of the original and under the authority of the order placed on the minutes on September 29, 1950, and when the proof offered on behalf of the State under the substituted copy of the indictment at this second trial had disclosed that the pulpwood actually stolen was one and 80/100tks units instead of cords, and of the length of five feet and three inches instead of the length of five feet and six inches, the County Prosecuting Attorney asked and was granted permission to amend the copy of the indictment to conform to the proof. The second order of the county court was not prepared and entered of record so far as the appeal record now before us discloses, if indeed the amendment of the copy was necessary to be made other than by [47]*47merely crossing out on the copy the word “cords” and substituting therefor the word “units,” and by striking out the words ‘ ‘ six inches ’ ’ and substituting therefor the words “three inches,” and by substituting the words “Bichton Tie & Timber Company” as owner instead of “W. M. Thrower” as owner, as was done. This action served merely to cause the copy of the indictment to read the same as did the original when it was amended by an order on the minutes on September 29, 1950.

The amendment of the copy of the indictment in the manner as aforesaid was allowed at the second trial, and the County Prosecuting Attorney was authorized to prepare and have entered an order on the minutes accordingly over the objection of the appellant based on the ground that the proof on behalf of the State had disclosed prior to the allowance of such amendment of the copy of the indictment that one and 80/100ths cords of such pulpwood, on the basis of a standard cord, was of a value of less than $25.00, the theft of which would have constituted petit larceny only, whereas it had been shown by the State that one and 80/100ths units of such pulpwood was worth approximately $30.00, or at least the sum of $28.80, the value charged in both the original indictment and the substituted copy thereof, that is to say, property of a sufficient value to constitute grand larceny if stolen. Moreover, the proof discloses that when the pulpwood was resold on the market by the co-defendants Glrady and Lucas, they realized as the sales price therefor the said sum of $28.80. And these two co-defendants testified as to their own guilt at the trial of the appellant and they contended that they stole this pulpwood at the request of the appellant, hauled it to the market in her truck after she had pointed out to them its location before it was loaded on the truck, and that they carried it to her premises where the ink stenciled ends of the poles were sawed off to prevent identification and thereafter hauled it away.

[48]*48The allowance of the amendment to the indictment is assigned as error again on this appeal on the ground that the amendment amounted to changing the offense from petit larceny to the crime of grand larceny, that is to say, from a misdemeanor to a felony without the consent of the grand jury in that behalf, in that the proof offered by the State prior to such amendment had disclosed as aforesaid that one and 80/100ths cords of such pulpwood, if standard cords, were of a value of less than $25.00, whereas that many units would have been worth more than $25.00. The amendment of the copy of the indictment was made on the second trial at the close of the proof on behalf of the State, and to conform thereto, and there had been no objection interposed to the testimony on the ground of a variance between the copy of the indictment and the proof, the only objection made being to the allowance of the amendment of the indictment to conform to the proof. Cf. Horn v. State, 165 Miss. 169, 147 So. 310; Davis v. State, 181 Miss. 239, 179 So. 740; Osser v. State, 165 Miss. 680, 145 So. 754; Kellum v. State, 213 Miss. 582, 57 So. 2d 316; and 52 C. J. S., p. 913, Sec. 98, citing Whittington v. State, 160 Miss. 705, 135 So. 190.

(Hn 2) As a general rule, where an indictment charges the theft of a certain number or quantity of things, the staté may prove the theft of a greater number or quantity than that alleged, or even of a lesser number or quantity if the value of such number or quantity is sufficient to bring the crime within the grade of offense with which accused is charged. 52 C. J. S., supra.

In 36 C. J. at page 813, See.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 2d 509, 215 Miss. 43, 2 Adv. S. 20, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimsley-v-state-miss-1952.