Hair v. State

1956 OK CR 28, 294 P.2d 846, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 159
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 7, 1956
DocketA-12269
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1956 OK CR 28 (Hair 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
Hair v. State, 1956 OK CR 28, 294 P.2d 846, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 159 (Okla. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

JONE-S, Presiding Judge.

Garland Hair was convicted in the District Court of Pontotoc County for receiving stolen property and was sentenced to serve 4 years in the penitentiary. The proof of the State showed that on the night of November 10, 1954, a check protector and blank checkbook belonging to the Webco Drilling Company of Ada was stolen. Approximately one month later this property was discovered by a farmer in a small wash house at the back of a vacant house into which the farmer was moving. The sheriff was notified and the check protector together with a few blank checks still remaining in the checkbook were taken to the sheriff’s office and there identified by an employee of the drilling company from whom they had been stolen.

*848 Arthur'Calvin testified that on November 9, 1954, he received a check from the Webco Drilling Company for wages he had earned as a roughneck on a drilling crew. That he showed the check to the defendant, Garland Hair, who told him that if they could steal the check protector and some blank checks, they could fill out the checks similar to the one which Calvin had in his possession and make some money on them. That they talked the matter over and decided to break into the drilling company office and steal the check protector and blank checks but that when it came time to go, the defendant said the moon was too bright and he refused to go. Calvin then .went on by himself, entered the building through a window and stole the protector and a checkbook. He then drove by defendant’s house, got the defendant out of bed and together they drove down to a spot near Lindsay where they ¡filled out one of the checks and cashed it at Lindsay. They then started to return to Ada and- in a pile of brush along the road near Wynnewood they hid the protector and checks. Twice after that Calvin and defendant returned to the brush pile and filled out checks and cashed them. On one occasion Calvin testified that he returned with one Sprouse Billy and they filled out a check and had it cashed. Later Calvin and Hair removed the protector and checks and placed them in a trunk in a shed back of Hair’s house in Ada. Calvin was arrested on December 12, 1954, in connection with the passing of forged checks and was placed in the county jail at Ada. Immediately after he was placed in jail he told his wife to tell the defendant to get rid of the protector and checks.

Mrs. Arthur Calvin testified that shortly after her husband was placed in jail, she went to Garland Hair and told him that her husband said for him to get rid of the check protector and the blank checks. That she gave Hair the keys to their Pontiac automobile so he could use their car in disposing of the property.

V. L. Martin testified that he had rented a place near the Latta school house. That on December 12, 1954, he was cleaning up around the place preparatory to moving in the following day. That when he returned the next day, he found the check protector and blank checks in question in a shed. He had cleaned out the shed the evening before and the articles were not in it at that time. There were some fresh automobile tracks in the yard of the Martin place which officers examined, took pictures of and compared with the automobile tires on the Pontiac car belonging to Calvin. The officers testified that in their opinion the Calvin automobile made the tracks at the Martin place.

We shall only consider two of the many assignments of error presented in defendant’s brief as the others are without substantial merit. First, was the evidence sufficient to sustain the conviction? Second, did the court commit reversible error in giving instruction number six?

Arthur Calvin was an accomplice and the jury should have been so instructed. However, when the trial court got ready to instruct the jury, counsel for the defendant told the court that he did not desire an instruction on accomplice testimony and none was given. In Smith v. 'State, 78 Okl.Cr. 375, 148 P.2d 994, 996, this court held:

“ ‘The general rule of law is that a person who steals property is not an accomplice of the one who receives the property, knowing it to be stolen. They are independent crimes.
“ ‘The well-recognized exception to this general rule is that if the one who steals and the one who receives the property conspire together, or enter into a prearranged plan for one to steal the property and deliver the same to the other, the one who receives it is the accomplice of the one who commits the theft, and vice versa. * * *
“ ‘The statute providing that no person shall be convicted of a crime on the testimony of an accomplice, without corroboration, was adopted for the purpose of protecting an accused.’ ”

See also Comba v. State, 68 Okl.Cr. 373, 99 P.2d 170; Key v. State, 38 Okl.Cr. 169, 259 P. 659.

*849 The Attorney General concedes that the proof of the State showed that Hair was guilty of burglary because he participated in the conspiracy to burglarize the building and then assisted in the as-portation of the stolen property after it had been removed from the building. However, it was contended that under the authority of Price v. State, 9 Okl.Cr. 359, 131 P. 1102, the State had the discretion of charging Hair with either the original taking or with receiving the stolen property. In the Price case the defendant Price, a butcher, had conspired with one Vaughn whereby Vaughn was to steal meat from a refrigerator car and sell it to Price for one-half its value. This court held that under the definition of accomplice the defendant Price was an accomplice in the larceny of the meat but that he was also guilty of receiving the stolen property and the county attorney could elect whether to try him for larceny or for the lesser crime of receiving stolen property. However, in McGee v. State, 60 Okl.Cr. 436, 65 P.2d 207, this court held:

“One who joins in with thieves and assists in the asportation of stolen property, knowing at the time he does so that the others acting with him are in the act of carrying away the property of another, must be held guilty as a principal.”

The proof in that case showed that Hughes and Sanders stole some tires and tubes from a service station. The next day they went to McGee and arranged to have him drive them to Oklahoma City in his car. The tires, and tubes were placed in McGee’s car. Sanders, Hughes and McGee went to Oklahoma City where the tires were sold and McGee returned to his home at Wa-tonga. In the body of the opinion this court stated:

“It is urged that there was no evidence tending to show that the defendant ever received or had possession of the stolen property.
“Webster’s Dictionary defines the word ‘receive’ thus: ‘To take, as something that is offered, given, sent,'paid, or the like; to accept.’
“The Century' Dictionary gives the word this definition: ‘To take from a source or agency of transmission; to take by transfer in a criminal manner.’ “While it is undisputed that the defendant hauled in his car the property in question from a place in Blaine county to Oklahoma City, the self-confessed thieves were with him on the trip and directed his action.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK CR 28, 294 P.2d 846, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hair-v-state-oklacrimapp-1956.