State v. Bailey

60 S.E. 785, 63 W. Va. 668, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 148
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 60 S.E. 785 (State v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Bailey, 60 S.E. 785, 63 W. Va. 668, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 148 (W. Va. 1908).

Opinion

POFEENBARGER, PRESIDENT:

On his writ of error to a judgment of the circuit court of Mingo county, imposing upon him a sentence of two years imprisonment, for the larceny of four barrels of whiskey, Halsey Bailey assigns, as error, among other things, the overruling of his demurrer to the indictment, founded upon the lack of averment therein of any mark or number on the barrels by which they could be distinguished from others of the same or similar kind. The objection is not tenable. Under State v. Huff 31 W. Va. 355, the indictment is good. It charges the larceny of “four barrels of whiskejr of the value of $300.00 of the goods and chattels of Sig Freiberg and Sol H. Freiberg.” The case cited held it sufficient to charge the larceny of “one keg of wine of the value of $15.00 of the goods and chattels of J. W. Hale.” See also Bishop’s New Crim. Pro., Vol. 11, section 700.

The prisoner was jointly indicated with three other persons, G. G. Mabe, Joe Staley and Everett Atkinson, but, on his election, was tried separate^. Practically all of the other assignments of error, relating to the admission and rejection of evidence, instructions to the jury, given and refused, and the motion to set aside the verdict, depend upon the legal principle applicable to the facts proven and to the establishment of which the evidence tends. In other words, if, from the facts, the jury could properly have inferred that the prisoner was a principal in the first or second degree, some of the rulings complained of are correct, and others wrong; but, if, as matter of law, he was only an accessory before the fact, the rulings are all wrong and the evidence does not sustain the verdict.

The following material facts might be found from the evidence: Sig and Sol H. Freiberg had thirty barrels of whiskey in the bonded warehouse of the Tug River Distilling Company at Williamson, Mingo county, on which they had paid the internal revenue tax at the rate of $1.10 per gallon, and four of which were hauled away by one James Blackburn, an employee of the Mingo Light and Ice Company, by direction of White Atkinson, one of the proprietors of that concern, pursuant to a request of the prisoner that he take them into his possession and care. At that time, the distilling company was in the hands of a receiver, and there was a [671]*671controversy, between the receiver and the Freibergs, concerning the title of the property or the right of the latter to remove it. The prisoner was the president of the distilling company and, as such, was interested in the controversy. Blackburn left one of the barrels at a saloon owned by one Frank Meeks and took the others to a pop factory adjoining the Mingo Light & Ice Company plant, both of which concerns were owned and controlled by said Atkinson and his two brothers, Everett and George, and the team with which he hauled the whiskey away belonged to the Mingo Light & Ice Company. Meeks bought the barrel of liquor, left at his place, from Everett Atkinson at the price of $45.00, but, on discovering that it was claimed by the Freibergs, he refrained from opening or using it. Part of the other three barrels was consumed while in the pop factory by the employees of the Mingo Light & Ice Company and others, and the balance was shipped to Bluefied. The prisoner was not present at the time it was taken away, but was either at Huntington, about 100 miles distant, or on the road to that place. However, he does not deny having directed Atkinson to take it and he virtually admitted his knowledge of its whereabouts when the officers were searching for it. This admission, however, was coupled with the statement that he thought it belonged to him, and, if he found that it did not, he would return it. While at Huntington or on his way to that place, he did nothing concerning the property taken, nor did he, at any time, have any of it in his actual possession or aid in the removal of it from the distillery. The purpose of his visit to Huntington ivas the settlement of a claim he had against somebody at that place, and which had no connection whatever with the stolen property. He did not sustain toward Atkinson or Blackburn, the relation of employer or master in anjr sense nor were the Atkinsons interested in the distilling company. Having learned that Staley, the storekeeper and gauger, at the distillery, intended to stamp and set out the whiskey, he told Atkinson to go down and get it and look after it.

The circumstances shown tended to prove that the claim of title or right to possession on the part of those who took away the whiskey was not bona fide. The concealment of its whereabouts after it had been removed evinced guilty [672]*672intent. It signified a determination to defeat the claim of the Freibergs, i? ot by the establishment of superior title, but by putting out of reach of the process of the courts, the subject matter of the controversy. Such conduct was in the nature of an admission of knowledge that the claim was groundless and untenable. If a person in good faith take the property of another believing it to be his own, he is not guilty of larceny, even though his claim turn out ultimately to have been unfounded, because of lack of intent on his part to deprive another of his property. This is so notwithstanding knowledge of the adverse claim at the time. State v. Flanagan, 48 W. Va. 115, 120; 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 523, 524. In State v. Hanagan, a wife, claiming title to certain fruit deposited in her husband’s cellar, instigated a third -party to get possession of it and ship it to her without the knowledge of her husband. He did so, under the belief that it belonged to the wife, and, on prosecution for the larceny thereof, this Court held the evidence would not sustain a verdict of guilty. But the claim of title must be asserted in good faith. It must be more than a mere colorable pretense to obtain possession, and whether it was set up in good faith is usually a question for the jury. State v. Caddle, 35 W. Va. 73, 78; Baras v. State, 41 Tex. 527; Thompson v. State, 43 Tex. 268; 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law 524.

Since the jury could have found a larceny of the whiskey, and also, that some of the parties above named were guilty, they were bound to determine which of them was the principal; for there can be no crime without a perpetrator nor an accessory without a principal. If Atkinson and Blackburn, the parties who actually took the whiskey, had no criminal intention in doing so, and took it by direction, or at the instance, of another party, such other party is, ex necessitate legis, the principal, though he was not present at the time and place of the taking either actually or constructively. The law does not justify or excuse an act which makes the intentional perpetrator thereof guilty of a felony, by denying or withholding remedy for the vindication of the peace and dignity of the state, by reason of the peculiar circumstances under which, or the means by which, it was accomplished. If the party who actually did the act was innocent of intentional wrong, and the act on his part was by procure[673]*673ment oí another, it imputes the criminal intent to that other and makes him the guilty party, although he was not in any sense an accomplice, co-conspirator, or aider or abettor of the actor. The relation of the parties to one another and to the act is such as to create an exception to the general rules of law respecting principals and accessories.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.E. 785, 63 W. Va. 668, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bailey-wva-1908.