State v. Crowder

197 P.2d 917, 114 Utah 202, 1948 Utah LEXIS 121
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1948
DocketNo. 7146.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 197 P.2d 917 (State v. Crowder) 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. Crowder, 197 P.2d 917, 114 Utah 202, 1948 Utah LEXIS 121 (Utah 1948).

Opinions

*204 WADE, Justice.

Wayne Crowder was convicted of the crime of grand larceny and appeals from such judgment and the sentence thereon.

The record discloses that appellant had been employed off and on by Mr. Eottini, who operates a dairy and farm near,Murray, Utah, for about two or three years prior to the time the offense was committed. During the time he was employed by Mr. Rottini, he and his wife and stepson occupied two rooms in the home of his employer which had been converted into a small apartment for the use of his employees by Mr. Rottini. This apartment was not locked off from the rooms occupied by Mr. Rottini and anyone who occupied the apartment had easy access to his home and could easily become acquainted with the layout and the routine followed by the Rottini family. Mr. Rottini had on occassion hired men to help on the farm for a period of two or three weeks and these men were allowed to room and board in the two room apartment occupied by appellant and his family, and also had easy access to the Rottini family’s rooms.

On May 15, 1947, appellant decided to leave the employ of Mr. Rottini and on the next day he and his wife packed their belongings and proceeded in their car to Ogden, Utah, where they remained about a day and then went to Superior, Wyoming, where appellant tried to get a job with a coal mining company. He was not accepted because he could not pass the physical examination. Appellant’s wife testified that on May 19th and the morning of May 20th, he was gambling in a bar at Superior, Wyoming; that she had accompanied him but that he did not come home with her; that this occurred on a Tuesday morning and that she did not hear from him and did not know where he was until Thursday, May 22nd, when he phoned her from Evanston, Wyoming, to bring the car, which she had, and pick him up. This she did and returned with him to Superior, Wyoming, where they were staying with her brother.

*205 On the night of May 21st, a cab driver saw appellant in Murray, Utah, at his cab stand and at appellant’s request he drove him out to 5217 South Redwood Road. The cab driver testified he recognized appellant because he had used his cab on previous occasions to be driven to the dairy, and he remembered this particular trip by appellant because he expected to take him to the dairy again and was surprised when appellant asked him to stop in front of 5217 South Redwood, instead of at the dairy which belonged to Mr. Rottini, the address being 5249 South Redwood Road, which was about 100 yards from 5217 South Redwood Road. The cab driver also testified that he again saw appellant in Murray in front of the cab stand at about 5 o’clock on the morning of May 22nd. The man who lived at 5217 South Redwood Road testified that appellant did not call at his home on that day.

Mr. Rottini testified that on May 24th he discovered that $2000 had disappeared from a hat box in which he had concealed it; that this sum consisted mostly of twenty dollar bills with the exception of about ten or fifteen ten dollar bills, and that he had been using this hiding place for about six months; that there was nothing to indicate that his house had been broken into and he had no reason to suspect the loss until his wife went to place another twenty dollar bill in the hat box and discovered that the money was missing; that he had last seen the money in the hat box on May 21st; that since appellant and his family left, no one was living in the house with him except his wife and son; that in connection with his dairy he has a milk route and this milk is delivered by himself, his son and his wife, usually between the hours of 4 a. m. and 8 or 8:30 a. m., at which time no one is in the house; that he has an employee named Brown who comes on the premises at 6 o’clock in the morning since appellant quit; that he was home the nights of May 21st, 22nd and 23rd, and that if a stranger had come on the premises during those nights, he would have been awakened by the barking of a police dog which he *206 owns; that this dog did not bark at appellant or anyone it knew, but always barked at strangers. This testimony about the dog was contradicted by appellant’s wife and stepson, who testified that the dog barked at everyone who came on the premises at night, including Mr. Rottini. Appellant’s wife also contradicted testimony by Mr. Rottini that he had employed no outside help besides his regular employees for more than six months before appellant quit.

Appellant was arrested in Suprerior, Wyoming. At that time he was in possession of $1000 in twenty dollar bills which he had left with a bartender in Superior, Wyoming, on May 23rd for safekeeping. When appellant left Mr. Rottini’s employ he was not known to have more than $300. On the trip back to Salt Lake in the custody of two Salt Lake County deputy sheriffs, he tried to explain his possession of the $1000 in twenty dollar bills by saying he had won it gambling in Evanston, Wyoming, but when they arrived in Evanston and one of the officers asked him to show him the place where he had won the money, he said he had won it in Superior, Wyoming.

Appellant contends that the court erred in admitting in evidence the $1000 in twenty dollar bills because no proper foundation was laid for its admission in evidence, the State having failed to identify the twenty dollar bills found in appellant’s possession as the identical bills which were stolen. In support of this contention he quotes the following from Wigmore, ‘Treatise on Evidence,’ Vol. 1, Sec. 154, p. 156:

“The mere possession of money is in itself no indication that the possessor was the taker of money charged as taken, because in general all money is alike and the hypothesis that the money found is the same as the money taken is too forced and extraordinary to be receivable.” (Italics added.)

However, appellant quotes further from Wigmore, the following:

*207 “Where the denominations of the money found and the money taken correspond in a fairly close way, the fact of the finding of that specific money would have probative value and he relevant, because the money found is fairly marked as identical with the money taken. Another mode, however, of making the fact of money possession relevant is to show its sudden possession, i. e., to show that before the time of taking the person was without money, while immediately after that time he had a great deal; this reduces the hypotheses to such as involve sudden acquisition, and a dishonest acquisition then becomes a natural and prominent hypothesis. On such condition the possession of unidentified money becomes relevant.” (Italics added.)

From the above quotation appellant argues that Wigmore says money may not be admitted in evidence unless (1) the denomination of the money found and the money taken correspond in a fairly close way or (2) there is a sudden possession of money following a period where it has been shown the accused was without money. He submits that neither one of these conditions were present in his case.

We agree with what Wigmore says, but we cannot agree with appellant that neither of the conditions are present in his case.

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Bluebook (online)
197 P.2d 917, 114 Utah 202, 1948 Utah LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crowder-utah-1948.