Harris v. State

120 So. 206, 153 Miss. 1, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 8
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1929
DocketNo. 27369.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 So. 206 (Harris 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
Harris v. State, 120 So. 206, 153 Miss. 1, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 8 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.

The appellant, Meek Harris, was indicted by the gand jury, of the circuit court of Oktibbeha county at the October, 1927, term for burglary of a dwelling house occupied by Evanna Riley, in that he took, stole, and carried away from such house certain goods, to-wit, bedding and clothing belonging to one Evanna Riley of the value of five dollars.

The burglary, the proof shows, occurred on the first Sunday night in (December, 1926, while Evanna Riley was at church. Her testimony is to the effect that she returned from church about nine o’clock; that before leaving she locked the doors of her dwelling, but upon her return from church she found that the house had been broken into and certain things, including the articles described in the indictment, had been taken away. It does not appear from the evidence that any person was tracked to or from the premises burglarized, nor was the situation, other than as to the condition of the house after the burglary occurred, described by the witness.

On the 16th day of February, 1927, about six weeks after the burglary, ail affidavit was made before the justice of the peace that certain property belonging to Evanna Riley was on the 4th day of December feloniously taken, stolen, and carried away, and that suspicion rested upon Meek Harris and Maggie Harris as being guilty of such crime; that such property, or a part thereof, was still in the dwelling house of Meek and Maggie Harris; that upon this information an affidavit and search warrant were issued; and that the officer went to the premises occupied by the defendant and his wife, at night, and found him in bed. The pillow slips, described *4 by the witness, Evanna Riley, were found on the pillows of the bed in which the defendant was lying’, also the sheets and other bedding, a lambrequin on the mantel, and some of the woman’s clothing was found in a trunk or dresser drawer. All of these articles were identified by Evanna Riley and other witnesses as being her property.

It does not appear that Maggie Harris was indicted or charged with this crime. The defendant proved by two seemingly disinterested witnesses, who were not related to him, that at the time the burglary was committed he was not at the scene of the burglary, but at another person’s premises, some twelve or fifteen miles away, from about five o’clock in the afternoon until about ten o’clock at night. Meek Harris himself testified that he was on such person’s premises on said occasion, and further' that he was told by his wife, Maggie Harris, that) she bought the goods which were found by the officer from a negro boy by the name of J. T). Swain some time after the burglary was committed. Both the defendant and his wife testified that Swain came to their place some time after the burglary; that, when he approached, the defendant and another man were in front of their dwelling house in conversation, and that Swain had something in a sack or bag which he wanted to sell to him, but that he did not want to buy; that Swain then went into the house where Maggie Harris was and shortly afterwards came out and stated that he had sold her the things. The de-. fendant’s statement was corroborated by the other party who was in conversation with him at the time of Swain’s appearance, and it does not appear that he was interested or related to the defendant.

Maggie Harris testified that Swain came to her house with the articles which were found therein; that he stated that his mother was moving away and wished to sell such articles; and that she bought the articles from him. Another witness, the mother of Meek Harris, testified that, *5 on or about the same occasion, Swain came to her place and tried to sell her the things; that she told him that; she had no money with which to buy the things; and that he then went to Meek Harris’ house, but that she did not know what happened up there.

,Ajt the time the search was made, the articles were in the house of Meek Harris visible. No effort was mad¡e to conceal them, -with the exception of some articles of the woman’s clothing which were in the dresser drawer or the trunk, as above stated. The rest of the articles were openly displayed. The officer making the search testified that he did not recall any statement of the defendant at the time as to how possession of the goods was obtained.

It appears further that J. D. Swain left the community about the time of the burglary and went to Arkansas, where his mother had moved shortly before the burglary occurred. Swain was introduced in rebuttal by the state, and testified that he did not have- the things and did not sell them either to the defendant or his wife; that he left the community about the time of the burglary, or before; that he did not recall hearing of it before he left; that he left the community some time in December and was gone for a year or a year and a half.

At the time the affidavit and search warrant were introduced in evidence, no objection was made to their introduction; but when the state closed its evidence, motion was made to exclude them on the ground that they did not properly describe the premises to be searched and were too indefinite, etc. We have decided, in cases heretofore, that objection must be made to a search war-want at the time it is offered in evidence, and, if not made then, it is too late subsequently to raise the question of the legality of such search. ' The affidavit and warrant, it will be noted, do not state that the affiant had good reason to, and did, believe that the goods or property was *6 in tlie possession of the defendant, hut merely states that he suspected the defendant. There might have been serious question had an objection been properly raised as to the sufficiency of the affidavit and warrant.

Another assignment of error is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction. We are of opinion that this assignment is well taken, as there was no proof to show that the defendant was present at the time the burglary was committed. Two disinterested witnesses, who were not contradicted in any way, testified that he was not present at the time the burglary was committed, but was some twelve or fifteen miles distant therefrom.; and this testimony is not disputed by any witness or by any facts from which contradiction could be inferred, unless it be the naked fact that the articles stolen, or. part of them, were found in the house occupied jointly by Meek Harris and his wife. If the defendant, Meek Harris, was not present at the burglary, then, before he could he connected with it as a principal, there must he proof of conspiracy between himself and some person who entered the dwelling and stole the property. Tt is true that ordinarily where there has been a burglary, and recently thereafter some person is found in possession of the stolen goods, he will he presumed to he t,he( guilty party, in the absence of a reasonable explanation as to how they came into his possession. In the ease before us, however, two people occupied the house in which the stolen goods were found. Each was capable of committing a crime and individually responsible to the law for crimes committed. The testimony of all the witnesses, with the exception of Swain, explains the defendant’s possession of the goods through the purchase of them by his wife; and the testimony that the defendant was not present at the time the burglary occurred is positively proved by unimpeached witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 206, 153 Miss. 1, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-miss-1929.