Reser v. State

229 P. 936, 27 Ariz. 43, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 106
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1924
DocketCriminal No. 596.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 229 P. 936 (Reser v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reser v. State, 229 P. 936, 27 Ariz. 43, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 106 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

McALISTER, C. J.

— Dewey A. Reser was convicted of the crime of receiving stolen property and given an indeterminate sentence in the state prison of from three to five years. From this judgment and sentence he appeals.

The information charges that one David B. Smith, alias Frank D. Sweeney, stole from Alfred S. Do-nan certain articles of jewelry, to wit, one gentleman’s gold watch, one lady’s Elgin wrist watch, one gold match case with diamond, one la valiere, rings, pins and chains, all of the value of $750, and that on or about the first day of October, 1923, the appellant “did willfully, unlawfully, knowingly and feloniously, and for his own gain and to prevent the owner, the said Alfred S. Donan, from again possessing his personal property, receive from said David B. Smith, alias Frank D. Sweeney, the said personal property, the said defendant then and there *45 well knowing tlie same to have been stolen as aforesaid.”

A number of errors, all based upon the giving of certain instructions, or the refusal to give others, are assigned, but they raise only three propositions. One of these is that the court erred in refusing to instruct a verdict for appellant upon the ground: First, that he was informed against for receiving stolen property knowing it to have been stolen when all the testimony in the case tended to prove, if anything at all, that he was an accomplice of Smith, alias Sweeney, in the commission of the burglaries and larcenies testified to by the latter, and that therefore he could not be guilty of the offense of receiving, since he could not receive property from himself; and, second, that the only testimony tending to connect him with the crime charged ;was that of Smith, the alleged thief in the case, and '.he was an accomplice. The state upon the other [hand contends that the corroboration of Smith’s testimony was sufficient, even though he was an ac-Icomplice; but, regardless of the correctness of this ! contention, he was not under the evidence an ac- ■ complice of appellant in the offense of receiving*, and his testimony alone would sustain the conviction,

i Appellant’s contention is based upon the well-i settled rule of law that one guilty of larceny cannot also be adjudged guilty of the offense of receiving the property stolen, for the simple reason that he cannot receive it from himself. Leon v. State, 21 Ariz. 418, 9 A. L. R. 1393; 189 Pac. 433. But it is immaterial that he may have been guilty of the larceny of the goods he is alleged to have received, in view of the fact that the reason for the rule disappears when it is disclosed that he was not present at the caption and asportation of the property by the principal thief, Smith, who testified that ap *46 pellant toot him about Tucson in Ms automobile “to spot bouses to burglarize,” but that they were not together when he eommited the various burglaries in Tucson, including that of Mr. Donau’s home. Since, therefore, appellant took no part in the actual commission of the offense of larceny, but subsequently received the property from Smith, he was subject to prosecution for the crime of receiving, provided he knew at the time he received it the property was stolen. Leon v. State, supra. “The offenses” (larceny and guilty receiving) says Wharton on Criminal Law, volume 2 (11th ed.), paragraph 1132, “are so distinct that one cannot be said to merge into the other, nor is conviction of the one in any way incompatible with conviction of the other. Hence, in defiance of such testimony, the defendant, if there be sufficient evidence of guilty receiving, may be convicted of such receiving.”

This court having held in the Leon case that “a person who steals property and one who afterwards receives it from him, knowing it to have been stolen, are guilty of separate offenses, and, without more, neither is an accomplice of the 'other,” it is unnecessary to .discuss .the sufficiency of the corroboration of Smith’s testimony. While the authorities are not agreed as to whether the thief is an accomplice of the one who is guilty of the crime of receiving the stolen property, within the meaning of the statute providing that an accomplice’s testimony must be corroborated, yet in the Leon case this court adopted the view that he is not'as being “in accord with the best interests of the law-abiding public and the orderly administration of justice, and did not deprive the defendant of any legal rights,” and nothing is presented in this case indicating that it should have taken the opposite view. This assignment cannot be sustained.

*47 In its charge to the jury the court correctly defined the terms “willfully,” “unlawfully,” “knowingly,” and “feloniously,” as used in the information. The word “knowingly” meant, it was said, “that the defendant was apprised of the fact that the goods he is alleged to have received were stolen.” But after this definition there followed this specific language:

“That is the explanation of those words. ‘Knowingly’ requires perhaps a little more explanation, and I might say it is not necessary that one see a crime to he charged with ‘knowingly’ receiving stolen goods. That is not the degree of knowledge that the law presumes or requires. You are instructed that the knowledge may be either actual or it may be knowledge which is imputed to the person receiving stolen goods. I mean by that that if the facts and circumstances are such as to impute knowledge it would be sufficient to sustain a conviction without any proof directly to the point that the defendant at the time he is alleged to have received the property was informed that it was stolen property. But the fact must be shown to your satisfaction beyond any reasonable doubt that when the defendant received the property, if he did receive it, it was in the possession of the thief who had stolen it from the owner, and that the defendant received it under such circumstances that a man of ordinary prudence and caution would be satisfied that it was stolen property.”

Later on in the instruction the following language was used:

“The felonious intent — going back to that ‘matter of intent — to warrant conviction, must have consisted of the defendant’s intentional receipt of stolen property knowing the same to have been stolen, as I have defined, ‘knowing/ with further intent in the defendant in receiving the same to deprive the owner of said property.”
“In order to convict the defendant of the crime of receiving stolen property, knowing it to have been *48 stolen, knowledge, as knowledge has been defined to you, that said property had been stolen must be established beyond a reasonable doubt.”
“In this connection also comes the question of the intentional receiving of said property, if the same was received by defendant, knowing the same to have been stolen, as the defendant must have intentionally received said property with guilty knowledge — that is, with knowledge that the same was stolen property, dr such knowledge as I have explained to you in another instruction,

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 936, 27 Ariz. 43, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reser-v-state-ariz-1924.