Randolph v. State

85 S.E. 258, 16 Ga. App. 328, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 613
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 10, 1915
Docket6439
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 258 (Randolph v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randolph v. State, 85 S.E. 258, 16 Ga. App. 328, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 613 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Wade, J.

1. In a prosecution for larceny, the value of the stolen property must not only be alleged and proved, but the ownership thereof must be laid (if known) in some person or persons (Buffington v. State, 124 Ga. 24, 52 S. E. 19), or if the owner be unknown, this fact must also be alleged (Stringfield v. State, 25 Ga. 476; Thomas v. State, 96 Ga. 311, 22 S. E. 956), and an indictment in which the ownership of the goods alleged to have been stolen is laid in a partnership, without alleging the names of the partners Composing the firm, is fatally defective. Buffington v. State, supra. A special property coupled with lawful possession [329]*329has been held sufficient to support an allegation of ownership (Robinson v. State, 1 Ga. 563); and where property is fraudulently taken and carried away from the possession of one holding it as a pledgee for security, the pledgee has such a special property in the pledge as authorizes a conviction under a charge of stealing property belonging to him. Henry v. State, 110 Ga. 750 (36 S. E. 55, 78 Am. St. R. 137). It is well settled that ownership may be laid in a gratuitous bailee (Wimbish v. State, 89 Ga. 294, 15 S. E. 325), and also that a carrier has such an interest in goods in its custody for transportation as to support the allegation of its ownership in an indictment for larceny or burglary (Hall v. State, 7 Ga. App. 115, 66 S. E. 390); and the ownership "may be laid in the person having lawful possession of the property, though he holds it as the agent or bailee of another. Bradley v. State, 2 Ga. App. 622 (58 S. E. 1064). It is said in 25 Cyc. 91, that “Any legal interest in the goods, although less than the absolute title, will support an allegation of ownership. But there must be an actual legal interest, not a mere claim or expectation of interest. . . The ostensible ownership is, however, enough to justify the description. So far as the thief is concerned, he can not question the title of the apparent owner.”

Under the law of Georgia (Civil Code, § 3705), whenever the relation of landlord and cropper exists, the title to the crops grown and raised upon the lands of the landlord by the cropper is vested in the landlord until he has received his part of the crops so raised, and is fully paid for all advances, made to the cropper in the year they were raised, to aid in making the crops. Nevertheless, the cropper has an interest in the crop raised by him, though it be not such an interest as he could assert in an action of trover, or against his landlord except in a certain limited way;.for section 3707 of the Civil Code declares that “The title to the crop, subject to the interest of the cropper therein, and the possession of the land remain in the owner.” It has been held that the cropper “has a property interest in the growing crop,” which he may mortgage. Fountain v. Fountain, 7 Ga. App. 361 (66 S. E. 1020). See same case, 10 Ga. App. 758 (73 S. E. 1096). Also, it is well settled that the cropper may foreclose his laborer’s lien against the landlord for his part of the crop after rent and advances are paid (McElmurray v. Turner, 86 Ga. 215, 12 S. E. 359; Lewis v. Owens, 124 [330]*330Ga. 228, 52 S. E. 332; Garrick v. Jones, 3 Ga. App. 383, 58 S. E. 543); from which it is clearly deducible that the cropper has a limited interest in the crop raised by him on the premises of his landlord. And we hold such interest to be sufficient to sustain an allegation of joint ownership with his landlord, where the testimony shows, as appears in this case, that all advances due by the cropper to the landlord had been fully paid off, and the remaining cotton yet in the possession of the cropper, including that alleged to have been stolen, belonged jointly and equally to the landlord and the cropper.

3. The evidence for the State showed that on or about December 35, 1914, about 100 pounds of seed-cotton was lost, or disappeared, from a cotton-basket, which had been left in the field rented from some one else by Dan Morman and in the possession of his cropper Ennis Johnson, who worked with him on halves. The cotton was taken at night, and on the following day tracks were discovered, leading from the cotton-basket, in the field, directly towards the house of the defendant. The landlord and the cropper who owned the cotton went to the house of the accused, accompanied by Mr. Keen, a white neighbor, the defendant’s shoes were carefully examined, and it was found that “his shoe-bottom and the sole of his shoe was broken and made a track identically the same as the ones that were there that we traced towards Jim Eandolph’s house; the shoe was kinder run down too,” and the “left shoe was turned over further than the right one.” The defendant was requested to place his feet, with the worn shoes thereon, in the tracks, and readily did so, when it was seen that his shoes fitted the tracks exactly. The tracks, however, did not come to the defendant’s house, but stopped at a point about 75 or 100 yards from the house. The defendant-stated at the time that he knew nothing about the tracks, though he admitted that the shoes he had on and which were compared with the tracks were the only shoes he possessed; and he said, when told that some cotton was missing, that he did not have any cotton, but there was found in ■his house a pile of cotton which he then said belonged to his father-in-law, Ben Wilson. The evidence showed that the defendant’s house was only about a quarter of a mile from the place in the field .where the basket from which the cotton had been stolen was found, that his father-in-law, Ben Wilson, was farming about a mile dis[331]*331tant from the defendant’s house, and that there were “four, five, or six hundred pounds” of seed-cotton discovered in the house. It further appeared, from the “indications,” that the missing cotton had been taken out of the basket, and “the tracks led towards the defendant’s house; there were locks of cotton, and the tracks that led back towards the defendant’s house.” Wilson, the defendant’s father-in-law, testified that the house in which he lived was closer to the point where the witnesses for the State said they “stopped tracking” than the defendant’s house was. He testified that he did not see any tracks, but he saw where the party investigating the matter stopped tracing tracks. He further testified, that he knew nothing ás to any cotton that the accused may have had in his house, but he himself had some there; that as he picked it he put it there; that there was a bale of cotton in that house at the time wdiich belonged to him; that he permitted the defendant to occupy one large room in this house belonging to him, and kept his cotton in a smaller room in the same house, and that he had cotton in this room before the defendant moved into the house, and that the house he occupied himself was only about 30 steps from the defendant’s house. On cross-examination he admitted that he did not remember exactly how much cotton he had in the small room of the house occupied by the defendant, and that he did not “know whether Jim [the defendant] could have put 100 pounds in there and me not know of it.” There was testimony tending to show that the- defendant was at church four miles away, about 10 or 11 o’clock, and left at that hour, and went off in the direction of his home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 258, 16 Ga. App. 328, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randolph-v-state-gactapp-1915.