State v. Demerly

168 N.W. 167, 40 S.D. 513, 1918 S.D. LEXIS 110
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1918
DocketFile No. 4315
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 168 N.W. 167 (State v. Demerly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Demerly, 168 N.W. 167, 40 S.D. 513, 1918 S.D. LEXIS 110 (S.D. 1918).

Opinion

POLLEY, J:

Appellant was convicted o|f the larceny of 50 head of sheep, and, from the judgment of conviction, and! an order overruling his motion for a new- trial, 'hé appeals to this court.

Appellant assigns the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict' and newly-discovered evidence, as well as errors of law committed hy the trial count. The larceny is alleged to have been committed under the following circumstances: Appellant and the prosecuting witness, Bates by name, were engaged in the sheep 'business. Each had a drove of sheep, on neighboring ranges in Butte county. In the vicinity of these ranges' were certain sheep ■pens where sheepmen in the surrounding neighborhood brought their sheep at shearing time to. have them1 sheared. During the shearing season of 1916 appellant and Bates, hy chance, 'brought their sheep to! these pens at the same time. Appellant had his sheep in the two droves, or band's, of about sixteen or seventeen hundred head, respectively, while Bates claimed to have had fifteen hundred and thirty-four head in his drove. A herder by the name of Oleson had charge of one of defendant’s droves of sheep., while- another herder by the name of Grayson had charge of the other. The Oleson band: was taken to ■the shearing pens first. ■ The work of shearing his band1 of sheep was interfered with and delayed' b>y rain and bad' weather, and it was some eight or ten days fromi the time they reached the pens [516]*516before the shearing was -completed. While the Ole-son- sheep were occupying the shearing pens, it wad necessary that the other droves of sheep that were awaiting their turn- at the pens to Ibe herded1 and allowed to- graze in the immediate vicinity. -It appears- that d-uring the time die Qles-on sheep- were in the pen®' -th-e Bates sheep and the Grayson-band of appellant’s sheep were allowed to come in contact, and a few (the exact n.u-miber is not shown) of the Bates sheep mingled with the appellant’s sheep-. But this mingling -of the sheep was not clone with the knowledge of, or through the connivance or negligence of, either appellant or Grayson, b-ut appears rather to have been th-e result o-f negligence -on the part of Bates’ herder in -allowing ¡the Bates sheep to graze1 too near to the appellant’s sheep-. It -dictes- nob ¡appear -that -either Bates or bis herder knew that Bates’ sheep- bad become commingled with appellant’s sheep until after -the Grayson'sheep bad- been -driven -into the shearing pens andl the- shearing had commenced. Neither does it appear just when Grayson learned that the sheep were mixed, though he admits that he knew, for about -a week before he made the fact kn-o-wn to any one else, that some of Bates’ ¡sheep were in 'appellant’s- herd. As soon. -a-,s the 'Grayson sheep reached the pen-s, the shearers dcmmenced shearing. They assumed that the shee-p- all belonged to appellant, and the wool, as it was taken off, was all packed together. The sheep, when sheared, -were turned into a chute, where they were marked with appellant’® brand1 and then turned out into ¡the pern. There was a sharp: conflict in the testimony as to how long the shearing ;oif the Grayson sheep- had been going on -before Bates- learned that some of his sheep- were in the pens, but as soon as he learned the fact he went immediately fo the shearing pens where he found appellant and to-ld appellant that some of his (Bates’) sheep ¡were mingled with appellant’® sheep. Appellant -claims that this was- the first knowledge he -had that any of the Bates shee-p- were ,in the pens with his own,. ITe a,t 'ctoce w-ent into the pens with Bates andl commenced! looking for sheep bearing Bates’ -mark. The sheep had been- marked at shearing time the year before by painting a brand on the short wo-ol, just after the sheep- had -been- sheared. -As tire wool grew, the brand gradually became dim and difficult to distinguish, and, after the sheep-ally became dim and difficult to distinguish, and, after the sheep had been sheared, there was- no ¡way by which they -could be distinguished; [517]*517but Bates found twelve sheep that he claimed as his and took them away with him. He claimed that at the time he took these sheep out of the pens, all but about three or four hundred of the Grayson sheep had been sheared, there was no-way by which they could 'be distinguished'; but Bates -found twelve sheep that he -claimed as his and took them away with him. He claimed that at the .time he took these sheep out of the .pens, all but about three or four hundred of the Grayson siheep had! been sheared, and it is the theory of the state that there had been the same ratio of Bates’ sheep in -the pens when shearing -commenced that was. there when Bates' m-ade the search. In other wor-d's, having found twelve of Bates’ sheep in with three or four hundred of appellant’s sheep, there must have been from sixty to one hundred of Bates.’ sheep in the entire drove of some sixteen or seventeen hundred. It is the contention of the state that appellant knew the Bates sheep were in with his when the sheep- were put into the pen-s, and that, in permitting the Bates sheep to be sheared as his own -and having them -marked as his own, he was fe-lon-iqusly appropriating said -slh-eep-, as well as the wool -that bad been sheared from their backs, to h-is- own use. On the other hand, it is the -contention of appellant that 'he -did not know that any of the Bates- sheep were in with his own until he was 'informed -of the f-aot :b-y Ba-tes, and that he at once permitted Bates- to examine the sheep and take :clut all that bore the Bates brand; and' that he (appellant) did not knowingly take or appropriate any of the Bates sheep.

[I] Upon the question of appellant’s knowledge the- -co-urt -charged the jury -as follows :

“N'oiw, gentlemen, -on the other hand, -the defendant Demerly, as I understand it, claims that he did -n-ot know that the sheep were in his bunch and -did not lcnlciw that they were being sheared- as his sheep, and that he did not know there were any sheep belonging to Bates and' Humphrey in his ¡bunch, until he was- ‘informed by Mr. Bates, and that immediately u-po-n being informed lire) went with Mr. Bates and allowed Mr. -Bates to pick his sheep- out of the b-unch. Now, gentlemen, if that is the case, the defendant would not be guilty.”

Under this -instruction, which was accepted as the law in th-e -case, and which we believe to- be correct, tihe question of defendant’s guilty knowledge is of -equal importance with -the question [518]*518of -the taking of the sheep. To prove that appellant knowingly took the Bates sheep', the state put upon the stand, five witnesses, viz., Grayson, Oleson, Burke, Carter, and H,oey. These witnesses were all in or around the shearing pens at times while the 'Grayson banid oif sheep was being sheared, and 'appellant was there a part of tine time. Grayson testified that he knew for about a week before the sheep were driven into the shearing pens that .the Bates sheep were in with appellant’s sheep, but he made no effort to separate them nor did he notify Bates, although he could easily have done sio. He testified that he told defendant about Bates’ sheep some time after the shearing commenced.

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Related

State v. Troutner
125 N.W.2d 55 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1963)
State v. Till
299 N.W. 454 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 N.W. 167, 40 S.D. 513, 1918 S.D. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-demerly-sd-1918.