Jenkins v. State

21 N.W. 232, 62 Wis. 49, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 115
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 21 N.W. 232 (Jenkins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. State, 21 N.W. 232, 62 Wis. 49, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 115 (Wis. 1885).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed November 6, 1884:

Lyon, J.

This case was here at the last term of this court on the report of the circuit judge, and it was then held that the court properly directed the information to be amended to aver that the moneys therein mentioned were stolen by some unknown person, and that tho verdict was sufficient. 60 Wis. 599. It was stated in the opinion that the original information contained but one count, which was for receiving the stolen moneys. Of course, the same is true of the amended information. Yet the brief of counsel for the prosecution starts out with the proposition that the plaintiff in error was informed against for stealing the moneys as well as for receiving them. This inaccuracy is not important, but it is well to avoid any misapprehension of the real nature and scope of the information.

After the decision on the report, the circuit court proceeded to render judgment on the verdict, and the accused was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment in the state prison. He is now suffering such punishment. The case is now here on writ of error. Tiie errors alleged for a reversal of the judgment are all predicated upon the refusal of the court to give the jury the instructions contained in the above statement of facts, asked in behalf of the accused, and upon the instructions given.

[55]*55Although the proposed instructions'are fourteen in number, it is believed they really raise but three questions. These are: (1) Is the testimony sufficient to support a finding that the money found buried in the stable in October was the same money which was taken from the safe of the express company in June? (2) If the accused stole the money, can he be lawfully convicted of feloniously receiving it? (3) If the money was embezzled, can there be a conviction on this information, which only charges a receiving of stolen money? These questions will be considered in the order stated.

1. Several of the rejected instructions go upon the theory that, but for the proof of the discovery of the buried money, the accused could not properly have been convicted, and that the verdict of guilty necessarily includes a finding that the moneys dug out of the earth in the stable were part and parcel of such stolen moneys. That is the most favorable theory for the accused, because it eliminates from the case any possibility that the stolen money may have been exchanged for other money, and the latter buried. The case will be considered, however, on the theory of those proposed instructions, and the question is, Does the testimony support a finding that the money found in the stable was parcel of that taken from the safe ?

The testimony tended to prove, and is sufficient to justify the jury in finding, the following state of facts: The plaintiff in error was a poor man. His only business for several years before this money was stolen from the express company was trading in horses of an inferior grade, the income from which was very limited. He performed little or no labor. His family consisted of a wife, and three children. ITe seldom, if,ever, had any money except very small sums. It would be difficult to find from the testimony that he ever had $100 at any óne time. He possessed but very little property at any time. He was sometimes embarrassed for [56]*56want of a little money. About the middle of March, 1S82, he proposed to mortgage his household furniture to one of the witnesses to obtain some goods for his family to live on. Two or three weeks before the money was stolen he wanted to mortgage his bureau and cook-stove for two or three dollars’ worth of groceries, and said he had nothing else. Within a very few days after the robbery he was seen to have a large roll of bills, which, a witness thinks, was as large as his wrist. One of these bills was a $10 bill. Yery soon after the robbery there was a marked improvement in his financial condition. lie paid a small debt that he had run up at a saloon, and afterwards paid cash for what he got at the bar. He purchased, during the summer, a harness, a wagon, three horses, and a cook-stove, amounting to between two and three hundred dollars, for which he paid cash. His family were better dressed. In August he purchased a place of his father, and in October following (but whether before or after the money was found in the stable does not appear) he paid $300 on such .purchase, and also $50 borrowed of his father the spring before. He introduced no testimony on the trial showing or tending to show where he got this money, or from what source he received the money ,buried in the stable.

It is not objected on behalf of the plaintiff in error that the testimony which tends to prove the foregoing facts was inadmissible, but the contention of his counsel is that the facts themselves (if they existed) are entirely insufficient to support a conviction. Great stress is laid upon the circumstance that there is no specific identification of the buried money, or of that paid out by the plaintiff in error after the larceny, with the money taken from the express safe. It is not perceived how such identification could be proved unless the consignor of the $2,500 package sent from Milwaukee had preserved the numbers and denominations of the bills contained therein. It does not appear that this was [57]*57done, and it is not claimed that the usual course of business requires it to be done. It sufficiently appears that the package contained currency — thg,t is, bank bills or treasury notes, and that the money buried in the stable was of that character. Hence there seems to be as specific an identification as the nature of the property stolen admits of. The case presents the same difficulty in this particular as it would if the stolen property consisted of wheat or any other commodity each parcel of which is like every other parcel. In • all such cases proof of identification, if made at all, must be made by showing other facts and circumstances from which the jury may find the identity, in the absence of specific or conclusive proof thereof. The question here is whether the above facts and circumstances which the evidence tends to prove are sufficient to identify the money found in the stable, which the plaintiff in error received and claimed as his own (and which, manifestly, he buried there), as the same money which was taken from the safe of the express company.

In Comm. v. Montgomery, 11 Met. 534, the indictment was for the larceny of a trunk, taken from a stage coach, containing bank bills, among which were five $100 bills of the Concord Bank. It was proved that the defendant presented at the Brighton Bank two bills of the Concord Bank of that denomination, one on March 23, 1846, and the other on April 13th of the same year. The larceny was committed December 5, 1845. There was some testimony tending to identify the bills so presented at the Brighton Bank as two of the bills that were in the stolen trunk. Testimony vvas received as to the business and financial condition and transactions of the defendant both before and after the larceny. The case was submitted to the jury in two aspects: first, on the theory that thehills were identified; and, second, on the theory that they were not. The defendant was convicted, and the conviction was affirmed on the ground that [58]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 N.W. 232, 62 Wis. 49, 1885 Wisc. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-state-wis-1885.