Hurst v. Territory of Oklahoma

1906 OK 21, 86 P. 280, 16 Okla. 600, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1906 OK 21 (Hurst 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
Hurst v. Territory of Oklahoma, 1906 OK 21, 86 P. 280, 16 Okla. 600, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 99 (Okla. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Pancoast, J.:

This action was brought in the district court of Kiowa county, on an indictment found on October 9, 1902, jointly against the plaintiff in error, Bennett Hurst, and J. J. Hurst, charging them with the offense of larceny of a domestic animal, under section 561 of the crime act. The animal alleged to have been stolen is described in the indictment as one brown two year old steer, branded on the hip, the personal property of Thomas Waggoner. The defendants pleaded not guilty to the indictment, and thereafter trial was had at the September, 1904, term, which resulted in a verdict' of guilty against the plaintiff- in error Bennett Hurst, the court directing a verdict of acquittal as to J. J. Hurst. Motion for new trial was heard and overruled.

Three assignments of error are alleged in the petition, and are argued in the brief. We will consider these in their order. The record discloses that R. E. Bullock, of Greer county, entered into contract with the defendants below for the purchase of some twenty five or more head of cattle, eighteen head of which were delivered to Bullock either at his home in Greer county or at some other point on the Red River. The place of delivery, however, we deem to be immaterial, in so far as this case is concerned. The Territory’s contention was that the steer alleged to have been stolen and sold to Bullock was one of the eighteen head de *602 livered. This steer was branded “DDL.-” The eighteen head of cattle purchased were delivered by the defendants and their men to Bullock either at his home in Greer county on the 5th day of February, 1902, or if not delivered at that place, then delivered to Bullock at a point on the Red River on that clay, and driven by Bullock, assisted by the men whom defendants had assisting them, to the home of Bullock. They ■were put into a corral, and the next morning were turned into a small pasture with a few head of milk cows, and were retained there some time, until the steer in question was discovered to be branded with a brand blonging to one Thomas Waggoner. As soon as the steer was discovered to be Wag-goner’s, Bullock notified him of that fact, and one of Wag-goner’s men came to Bullock’s place, took possession of the steer, and drove him away. This is only a partial statement of the facts as shown by the record, but we deem it sufficient for the purpose of enabling us to proceed with the discussion of the case.

The first assignment of error is a general one, that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law and evidence, and that the evidence is wholly insufficient to support the verdict. In the argument of this proposition, it is claimed by plaintiff in error that there was no evidence offered that Waggoner was the owner of the steer, except that it was branded with his brand, and that there was no evidence offered that the steer was taken without Waggoner’s consent. The evidence shows conclusively, and there is no contradiction of it in the record, that the steer was branded DDD; that this was Thomas Waggoner’s brand, and was well known by the witnesses as his brand, and had'been well known for a number of years. The evidence in this case does not show whether *603 the brand was or was not recorded, and it is contended that an unrecorded brand is not competent evidence to prove ownership, but is only evidence of identity; that a brand, to be competent evidence of ownership, must be recorded; and in support of this contention, Article 4, of chap. 3, sec. 101, Wilson’s Annotated Statutes, as well as séveral Texas cases, is cited.

Section 101 of Wilson’s Annotated Statutes, referred to. is as follows:

“In all suits in law or in equity or in any criminal proceeding, when the title to any stock is involved, the brand on any animal shall be prima facie evidence of ownership of the person whose brand it may be, provided that such brand has been duly recorded as provided by law.”

This section of the statute is copied from the Dakota statute, and is identical with the statute upon that subject of several of the Western states. Nevada’s statute is identical with it, and the question has been discussed there, as well as in New Mexico and California. These statutes have held that this statute has no application to the use of a mark or brand in the identification of cattle, as evidence of ownership, in a criminal prosecution for larceny. In the case of State v. Cardelli, 10 Pac. 433, the same objection was there made, it being contended that evidence by brand, where the brand was not recorded, was not competent to prove ownership-. The facts in that case showed that the cattle stolen had been butchered; that the}*' were identified by the brands on the hides ; that two persons in that neighborhood used brands with the same letters, the only distinction being a difference in the style of the letters. The witnesses, however, frankly acknowledged that they had no means of iden *604 tifying the cattle except by the brands and ear marks. A conviction was had in that case and the judgment affirmed' by the supreme court.

It is a matter of common knowledge that in many instances, and particularly with persons owning large herds of cattle, that the only method of identification and the only proof of ownership that can be produced or obtained is the brand or marks, and if it should be held, as contended for by plaintiff in error, that this statute makes evidence of ownership by brand incompetent, except where the brand is recorded, then in such cases it would be absolutely impossible to prove ownership.

Besides, under another section of our statute, the question of ownership in a ease of larceny is of much less importance than it was under the common law. Section 5362, Wilson’s Annotated Statutes, provides:

“When an offense involves the commission of, or an attempt to commit, a private injury, and is described with sufficient certainty in other respects to identify the act, an erroneous allegation as to the person injured or intended to be injured is not. material.”

And in the case of Martin v. Territory, 4 Okla., 105 where the proof showed the property was taken from one J. S. Lyons, who was the agent of the owner, and the indictment charged that he was the owner of the property, it was held not to constitute a fatal variance. And in People v Barringer, 11 Pac. 799, which was a' case of larceny and in many respects identical with the case at bar, the question of ownership being in dispute and proven only by ear marks, and as in this case, there being no pretense or evidence that the defendant had any right to the property or its possession, this *605 statute was applied aud the court there held the-evidence to be sufficient to support the verdict. In the case of Territory v. Chavez, 30 Pac. 903 (New Mexico,) where oral evidence of brands was the only evidence introduced and relied upon to prove ownership, it was held that to have excluded such testimony would have been to prevent proof of the- true ownership of the animal, and to defeat the prosecution of the offense. And it was there held “that the brand law does not require that the ownership of the animal must be proved by the brand itself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1906 OK 21, 86 P. 280, 16 Okla. 600, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-v-territory-of-oklahoma-okla-1906.