State v. Allen

189 P. 84, 56 Utah 37, 1920 Utah LEXIS 22
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1920
DocketNo. 3428
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 189 P. 84 (State v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Allen, 189 P. 84, 56 Utah 37, 1920 Utah LEXIS 22 (Utah 1920).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The defendant was charged with the crime of grand larceny in the district court of Utah county, was convicted and sentenced to an indeterminate term, not exceeding ten years, in the Utah state prison, and in addition thereto to pay a fine of $1,000.00, from which he appeals.

The information is in the usual form. The material and controlling facts dedueible from the statements of the witnesses who testified for the state and on behalf of the defendant, all of which facts are undisputed, are in substance as follows:

On November 27,1918, and for five or six years prior thereto, the defendant and his brother were the owners of what in the record is called the Allen ranch, comprising approximate[39]*39ly 20,000 acres of wild lands. The lands were nnfenced and were nsed by the defendant for grazing lands for his sheep, numbering, including all ages and sexes, about 6,000 head. The lands were all arid, and the only water obtainable to water his sheep was from a spring which was owned by the defendant, the water of which, by means of a pipe line constructed by him, was conducted a long distance to the corrals on the ranch. At or near the corrals there had also been constructed a cement or concrete tank of the capacity of about 10,000 gallons, into which the water flowing from the pipe line was discharged. Near this tank and the corrals were also constructed cement or concrete watering troughs by means of which the sheep, old and young, were watered daily. Those watering troughs were supplied with iron railings to keep the sheep from crowding into them, but through or under such railings they could easily reach the water. There were also what are termed lambing grounds on the ranch at which tubs were kept to water the sheep having lambs. The ranch is in a somewhat extended valley in Utah county surrounded by hills and mountains and large tracts of wild government lands. The feed for the sheep on the ranch was at times somewhat scarce. There was a large band of horses, by some witnesses placed at about 100 head, which roamed at will over the wild lands aforesaid and over defendant’s ranch. These horses made daily incursions upon the watering troughs aforesaid to obtain water, and in doing so would paw down and destroy the watering troughs, destroy the iron railings thereon, and upon occasions trample the sheep, and especially the lambs, and injure them, and prevent the sheep from obtaining water. These horses had torn down the tank that was first erected and which had to be replaced by a stronger one. They also ate the feed growing on the ranch which was needed for the sheep, and in many ways constantly harassed, annoyed, and interfered with the sheep and lambs on the ranch so that the horses became what in the record is termed an unbearable nuisance. The defendant’s testimony in describing the actions of these horses is not only uncontradicted, but is in substance corroborated by some of the state’s witnesses as well [40]*40as his own, and for that reason we insert his statements. He testified:

“ * * • * When we are watering sheep here in the spring and in the fall, they come in, rush to these troughs. They would he all around the troughs here, eight to ten sheep deep, and still stringing in. These hands of horses, 100 or more of them, would come up to these troughs because the water from the spring is the only water they could get. The horses would come up in bands of twenty-five to thirty-five, they came in on the run, one behind the other, like a bunch of deer, up to the troughs for water; they would pile into the sheep, pawing the sheep, trampling the lambs and the sheep; then they would stand around the troughs and gradually they would work away to the edge of the valley again; they would break the cement on the side of the troughs and break the irons ofE the troughs, putting me to a constant expense to repair them; and these horses would eat the grass which I needed for the sheep; it was an injury to me to have them eating up the grass. This condition continued for nearly two years before the complaint in this case. * * * On one occasion, about two years ago, we built a section of a tank with concrete, and these horses came in here to water and getting around the tank and rubbing against it shook it all to pieces, so we had to take out the concrete and build it over again. I am not seeking to give you all the occasions when the horses would come in and do damage, but only to tell you the general character of the damage they did when they made these incursions upon my property, and this continued for about two years and was of daily occurrence. Some of the horses were wild, and some tame ones would get in the bunch.”

The defendant, it seems, knew who owned some of the horses, but there were many whose owners he did not know. Indeed, there were some which he thought had no owners. He, through his employés, had made numerous attempts to learn who the owners of the trespassing horses were. He also attempted to have the poundkeeper take charge of them. Upon inquiry, however, he learned that there was no poundkeeper in the precinct. At one time, as the sheriff of the county, who was a witness for the state, testified, the defendant appealed to him for advice respecting the trespassing horses and what to do with them. After obtaining no satisfactory information or results from any source the defendant in the afternoon of the 27th day of November, 1918, with the assistance of two or three of his employés, rounded up a band of thirty or forty [41]*41trespassing borses which were on the ranch in the vicinity of the corrals and watering troughs and drove them into a corral. They drove the horses into the corral for the purpose of examining them to ascertain whether they were branded and in case a brand or mark was found on any horse it would be turned loose. In making the examination aforesaid six horses of various' ages and sizes and two mules, one of which was quite young, were found which had no brands or marks, and the owners of which, if they had any, were unknown to the defendant. He then and there declared his purpose to “get rid” of the unbranded horses and mules which were not known to have any owner, and, in order to get them away from the watering troughs and corrals, he directed one of his employes to drive the six horses and the two mules to a ravine which was between two and three miles distant from the watering troughs and corrals, but only a short distance from a public road, where he said he would shoot and kill them. The employé then drove the six horses and two mules to the ravine, where the defendant shot and killed them with his rifle and permitted them to lie where they fell. The dead animals were in plain sight from the public road aforesaid. The defendant frequently stated what his purpose in killing the animals was. Upon that subject he testified:

“ * * * Coming down to tlie very day in question here, I was on the ranch that day, and I saw these animals that had been doing damage. They were on the property belonging to me and my brother. I told my employes, Melvin Webb and Henry Nichols, to go out and corral them. I intended to get what horses there was in the bunch that had no brands nor any signs of ownership and kill them; that is what I made up my mind to do, and that is what I told Webb and Nichols. I gave it out publicly to all those that were about that I intended to kill those horses. I thought I had a right to kill them. People have been killing the same kind of horses in that valley and Rush Valley for years. * * * When I ordered these animals penned up and driven into the corral, I had no idea or thought of stealing them.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 84, 56 Utah 37, 1920 Utah LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-allen-utah-1920.