Harrison v. State

1913 OK CR 286, 135 P. 948, 10 Okla. Crim. 210, 1913 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 313
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 30, 1913
DocketNo. A-1804.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1913 OK CR 286 (Harrison 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
Harrison v. State, 1913 OK CR 286, 135 P. 948, 10 Okla. Crim. 210, 1913 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 313 (Okla. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ARMSTRONG, P. J.

The plaintiff in error. Jack Harrison, was convicted at the February, 1912, term of the district court of Beckham county, on a charge of larceny, and his punishment fixed at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a period of one year and six months. To reverse this judgment he has brought this appeal.

Only two questions are properly raised by the record and brief on behalf of plaintiff in -error. The facts developed at the trial control the disposition of both.

Marshall Anderson was the complaining witness, and on behalf of the state testified that he lived at Texola; that on the night of March 30, 1911, he lost 174 pounds of bacon worth from 16 to 18 cents per pound; that the bacon was taken from a box in his barn where he had packed it away in wheat bran; that on the morning after the bacon was stolen he discovered the loss and upon investigation found that a two-horse hack had pulled out of the main road near the section line and stopped at his barn; that he followed the tracks of the vehicle to a place in Texola, where it was afterwards proven the hack of the plaintiff in error had been standing. There had been a rain a short time before, and the tracks were plain. Witness further testified that he reported his loss to the deputy sheriff at Texola, and after some preliminary examinations a- search warrant was sworn out, and the deputy sheriff, Mr. Earnest, and Mr. Woolsey, Mr. Loftis, and the witness made a thorough investigation and found that the horse tracks near the barn of the complaining witness' compared with the tracks at the place where the team of plaintiff in error bad been standing in the town of Texola; that these parties then went to the home of plaintiff in error and found his hack swept out clean; that on the ground in the rear of the hack was wheat bran containing salt and grease and an odor of *212 bacon; that about 500 or 600 yards from the house they found the plaintiff in error in a ravine, apparently hiding; that near where he was found the lost meat was also found in some tow sacks covered over by dirt; the meat was positively identified by the complaining witness as his. Witness further testified that he gave no one .permission to take it away; that it was taken away without his knowledge or consent and against his will.

Witness Woolsey corroborated the major part of the testimony of complaining witness, and in addition testified that plaintiff in error was at his store about 8 o’clock on the evening of the theft and wanted to buy certain groceries on time; that witness would not sell them to him. He also testified that the meat was worth about 15 or 16 cents a pound, and that the plaintiff in error was wearing a pair of leather boots when at his place.

Witness Martin Loftis corroborated the testimony of Wool-sey, except he did not testify as tO' the value of the meat in question or what the plaintiff in error was wearing.

On behalf of the defense, the plaintiff in error himself testified that he was in the town of Texola on the 30th of March; that his son Lon was with him; that they left Texola about 8 o’clock at night; that he wore rubber boots at the time; that he knows where complaining witness Anderson lives, but was never on Anderson’s premises; that he did not take the meat in question, and did not have anything to do with it; that it was not on his quarter section of land when found, but admitted that it was in a pasture used by him; that he did not take any meat home with him on .the night of the 30th of March; that he had some groceries and a barrel of queens-ware in his hack; that Tom Stewart and John Esty met him above half a mile from his home; that his sons Lon and Verge helped him unload his groceries, etc., from the hack. He admitted on cross-examination that his hack stood near the old Armfield saloon building in Texola, where the state contended it had been. He testified at first that he only carried one sack of flour home, and later that he had two sacks, one of which *213 he got at Texola and the other at Beninine; that he got home about 9 or 10 o’clock; that he left Texola about 8 o’clock; that he lived eight or nine miles from Texola. On further cross-examination he testified that Tom Stacey came down and helped him unload his hack and that John Esty stayed all night with him; that J. H. Brady was also at his house that night.

Lon Harrison, son of the plaintiff in error, testified that he was in Texola with his father on the 30th of March; that they left town about 9 o’clock; that his father on that day wore rubber boots; that he was with his father all day and during the night after they left town; that his father did not go to Marshall Anderson’s place on that date; that they carried home with them, among other things, two sacks of flour, both of which they got at Butler’s in Texola; that they did not get any at Beninine.

Bert Harrison, another son of the plaintiff in error, testified that on the 30th of March he was at the home of Tom Stewárt; that he went home at night; that John Esty, Tom Stewart, and J. H. Brady were there; that his father got home about 10 o’clock in the hack, and had certain groceries and glassware with him; that there was no meat in the hack; that no meat was carried from their house that night into the ravine; that his father on that date was -wearing rubber boots. He testified that Stacey stayed all night; that Esty did not.

Witness Crawford testified for the plaintiff in error that he was at complaining witness Anderson’s place four or five days after the alleged theft; that he had a conversation with Anderson, who showed him the tracks where the hack and team had stopped; that he saw some horse and mule tracks, which were pointed out by Anderson; that he looked for bran in Harrison’s yard and did not see any.

Other witnesses testified on behalf of the plaintiff in error that dry salt meat was worth- from 11 to 12 cents a pound ; that the meat in question was probably better than the meat they could buy for that money.

Plaintiff in error, Harrison, being recalled, testified that he was down in the ravine looking for his horses and cows when *214 the officer and searching party found him; that he had tried to drive his stock up and had set down to rest.

Witness O. D. Earnest, on behalf of the state, testified that on the evening of the theft he saw the plaintiff in error and his boy in a buggy or hack about a mile south of Texola; that at that time plaintiff in error had on a pair of leather boots; that he examined the tracks the horses made at the barn of the complaining witness; and that there were no mule tracks among them.

When the case was called for trial, the plaintiff in error filed a motion for continuance, which is as follows:

“Jack Harrison, being first duly sworn, says that he is the '^defendant in the above-entitled cause; that he is unable to pro•ceed to trial of this cause at this time for want of material •evidence, to wit, the evidence .of one Tom Stewart, who is- a material witness in this cause, and defendant has used due diligence to obtain his evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK CR 286, 135 P. 948, 10 Okla. Crim. 210, 1913 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-state-oklacrimapp-1913.