Ingram v. State

162 S.W. 66, 110 Ark. 538, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 66 (Ingram v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingram v. State, 162 S.W. 66, 110 Ark. 538, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 435 (Ark. 1913).

Opinion

Hart, J.

Appellants. prosecute this appeal to reverse a judgment of conviction against them upon the charge of burglary.

On the night of the 27th day of May, 1913, the storehouse of L. H. Crawford, in the town of Decatur, in Benton County, Arkansas, was burglarized, and a quantity of goods stolen therefrom. Crawford states that he left the storehouse about 10 o’clock on the night of the 27th of May, 1913, and returned to it about 7 o’clock on the morning of the 28th. When he entered the store he discovered that his store had been broken into and a lot of goods taken therefrom. He found a broken buggy spring on the inside of the store, and saw the marks where the buggy spring had been put under a window and had pried it up. He missed two leather suitcases, one worth $6 and the other $5.50. There was also missing a cloth suitcase worth $1.50; three pairs of pants; three pairs of shoes; three pocket knives; three watch fobs; about twelve pairs of drawers; eleven undershirts; fifteen or twenty pairs of hose; some handkerchiefs and other articles, and $5.10 in money. He said the property taken, and which was afterward returned to the store and identified, invoiced about $80. He said it was his custom to leave one dollar, two fifty-cent pieces, four quarters, ten dimes, nineteen nickels and fifteen.pennies in the money drawer. That he had done so on the night his store was burglarized, and that he missed the same on his return to the store the next morning.

Appellants were seen to alight from a freight train at the town of Decatur on the day preceding the night of the burglary. A blacksmith in the town saw one of them standing near an old pile of buggy springs during the day, apparently looking at them. In a few minutes he left and rejoined his companions, who were the other two appellants. The piece of buggy spring found in the store by Crawford on the next morning after the burglary was fitted to a piece on the pile, and it was ascertained, by means of a splotch of white paint on the piece found in the store and on the piece to which it was fitted, that they corresponded exactly. Lloyd Carpenter, one of the appellants, had been going to Decatur at intervals for some time prior to the burglary, and had been visiting the daughter of the night watchman. Some time after supper on the night of the burglary, he was seen on the porch at the night watchman’s house. On the next morning after the burglary, Carpenter was arrested in the town of Decatur, and the night watchman remarked to him: “I thought you■ were gone.” Carpenter replied: “I did start, but I took a notion to come back home. I got oft at the water tank and stayed all night. ’ ’ He further stated that the other two boys went on. This conversation occurred before the other appellants had been arrested. They were arrested at the water tank on the morning after the burglary, and stated that they and Carpenter had stayed there all night and that no one else had stayed there. After they were arrested, a search was made for the goods, and, in a thicket near the water tank, two leather suitcases were found, covered with weeds. The suitcases contained three pairs of shoes, three pairs of pants, six collars, three watch fobs, three pocket knives, some jewelry, handkerchiefs and hose, and several suits of underwear. Later on, a cloth suitcase was found, and all this property was identified by Crawford and his clerk as belonging to him. The boys were searched, and some money, consisting of small change and some bills, was found on them. Some cartridges for an automatic pistol were also found on Chamberlin, one of the appellants. Chamberlin stated that he had left his pistol at home.

The deputy sheriff received information that an automatic pistol was hid near the water tank, and made an investigation and found a forty-five automatic pistol and box of cartridges with it. The water tank was north, or northwest, of Decatur; and on the next morning after the burglary, between 8 and 10 o’clock, a witness met appellant, Carpenter, somewhere northwest, of Decatur, and Carpenter asked him if there was a road to Gentry. Witness told him the nearest way to Gentry was to go by Decatur down the railroad track, and asked Carpenter if he was hunting work or “hoboing.” Carpenter replied that he was looking at the country. He went on back to Decatur with the witness. On the night of the burglary, Carpenter was seen in the town of Decatur after the berry train went north. It was proved by appellants that a great number of transient people were in town on the night of the burglary on account of the berry season, and that appellant, Carpenter, left the night watchman’s house and proceeded toward the depot, stating that he and the other appellants were going to leave on the berry train going north that evening. The night watchman bade him goodbye a short time before the train left and thought that he and the other appellants left on the train.

It is first insisted by counsel for appellants that the testimony is not sufficient to convict them. The testimony is meager, but when it is all considered together, we think it is sufficient to support the veráict. The undisputed evidence shoAvs that the store of Crawford was burglarized on the night of the 27th of May, 1913, and that a quantity of goods Avas taken therefrom, including three suitcases and some small change amounting to about five dollars. Appellants admit that they stayed all night that night at the Avater tank north of Decatur, and that no one else had stayed there. The suitcases containing the goods taken from the store of Crawford were found concealed in a thicket Avith some Aveeds piled over them, near the water tank Avhere appellants had stayed all night. Carpenter Avas arrested, and, before he kneAv the other appellants had been arrested, stated that he had stayed at the Avater tank by himself and the others had gone on. The other appellants stated that they had all stayed at the Avater tank. Carpenter had told the night Avatchman that he, in company with the other appellants, intended to leave Decatur on the night of the burglary and had gone doAvn to the depot to leave on the berry train. It is true the night Avatchman testified that he saAv him there and that he, in company AVith the other appellants, left on that train; but other Avitnesses stated that they saAv him on the night watchman’s porch in the town of Decatur on the night of the burglary after the berry train had gone north. It appears that the window of the store had been pried open Avith a piece of buggy spring, Avhieh had a splotch of white paint on it; and this piece of buggy spring exactly fitted to another piece of a buggy spring, with a splotch of Avhite paint on it, lying on a pile near a blacksmith shop; and the blacksmith had seen one of the appellants apparently examining this pile of springs on the day preceding the burglary. When all these facts and circumstances are considered together, they point to the guilt of appellants with sufficient certainty to warrant their conviction.

It is next contended by counsel for appellants that the court erred in admitting evidence that one of the prisoners confined in the jail Avith appellants told the deputy sheriff: that Chamberlain had told him that he had an automatic pistol hid near the water tank. Upon an examination of the transcript, we do not find that the court permitted the deputy sheriff to testify that one of the prisoners had informed him that Chamberlin had told him that he had a pistol near the water tank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 66, 110 Ark. 538, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-state-ark-1913.