State v. Harned

281 P. 910, 129 Kan. 120, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 1929
DocketNo. 28,868
StatusPublished

This text of 281 P. 910 (State v. Harned) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Harned, 281 P. 910, 129 Kan. 120, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 30 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

The defendant in this case was convicted of grand larceny, largely upon the evidence of an accomplice. The defendant appeals, urging three errors in particular: that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, that one of the jurors was disqualified, and newly discovered evidence. The discrepancies as to dates are relied upon strongly by appellant to show that the evidence of the state was unreliable and impossible. There appear to be only two positively fixed dates in the testimony of the state; one is January 7, 1928, when the wife of the accomplice sold the cowhide and received a check therefor, which she and her husband say was the hide taken from the stolen cow a week or ten days before and buried in a manure pile during that time; the other fixed date is January 8, 1928, a Sunday, when two hogs were missing from the Zeigler feed [121]*121lot. A pool of blood was first noticed that morning, also blood on the fence and marks of dragging the hogs for a short distance on the ground. The conclusion of the defendant is that this blood and these marks were fresh, but the abstract of the evidence does not so state, although such is possible and perhaps more likely to have been recent than otherwise. The accessory witness testified that the two hogs and the cow were taken at the same time; that the hogs were killed there at the feed lot and the cow led to his place and there killed and dressed, where the hogs were also dressed. There is apparently an inconsistency. If the blood and dragging marks were fresh from the night before and the hogs and cow were taken and butchered the same night, the hide of the cow could not have been sold on the afternoon of January 7. But we are not told that the blood and dragging marks were not a day old, neither would the best judgment of observers be necessarily positive along that line. A day earlier would have made this feature of the story possible, although not consistent with the evidence of the accessory that it was a week or ten days before the 7th. Or, if the blood and marks were fresh, the cow might have been taken earlier than the hogs. However, the witness would then be in error as to their having been taken together the same night. While truthful stories should be consistent, and all the parts be in harmony, yet it is a rare incident that they harmonize completely. People do not remember dates and no positive dates were given here from the memory of any of the witnesses. Records were resorted to for both dates given.' Aside from the record of these two dates, all the witnesses spoke of the time as being the last part of December or early part of January.

Another suggestion of possible mistake in the evidence is as to this hide being off the stolen cow. Inconsistencies in testimony to be serious enough to require a reversal should ordinarily rest on something more than arbitrary dates on one hand and approximate dates from memory on the other. This as well as the two other points alleged as errors were included in the motion for new trial, which was fully presented to the trial court and overruled.

Quite a little is said, as is often done in earnest argument of the advocate, of the weakness and absurdity of some of the state’s testimony in the face of the strong and positive evidence of the defense to the contrary, but we must leave that part of the case entirely to the jury and the trial court.

[122]*122Evidence was introduced orally before the court on the motion for new trial to the effect that one of the jurors had a short time prior to the trial expressed an opinion that the defendant ought to be convicted. The juror when called positively denied any such conversation and reasserted that he had not prior to the trial formed or expressed any opinion as to the defendant’s guilt or innocence. It is not usual to disturb the finding of the trial court under such circumstances where the evidence on the motion for new trial was oral.

“On motion for new trial, where the truth of the answers given by a juror concerning his qualification to sit as such is questioned and evidence is introduced tending to show that the juror had not answered correctly and other evidence that he had answered truthfully is presented, the finding of the trial court that the juror was qualified will not be disturbed in this court.” (State v. Nixon, 111 Kan. 601, syl. ¶ 2, 207 Pac. 854. See, also, State v. Moore, 79 Kan. 688, 100 Pac. 629; State v. Gardner, 126 Kan. 803, 271 Pac. 280.)

The newly discovered evidence which appellant urges as a ground for new trial is that of Robert Bursk, whose name was mentioned for the first time in this connection by the accessory witness upon the trial as being one and the only one to whom the accessory witness had told the story of the larceny committed by himself, the defendant and one Frank Carnes, and that he had told it to Bursk about ten days after it occurred and when Bursk was taking dinner at the home of the witness. In conjunction with the proposition of newly discovered evidence, the appellant also presents the further assignment of error — accident and surprise which ordinary prudence could not have prevented, and refers to the first mention of the name of Bursk as one having been told about the theft. Our attention is also called to the fact that this same witness did not mention anything about Bursk in his testimony on the preliminary hearing, and when asked said he had not told the matter to any one except the county attorney about ten months after it occurred. The record shows that a subpcena was issued on request of defendant for Bursk during the trial, but it was returned not found. The evidence shows that considerable effort was made by the defendant to locate Bursk immediately after the trial, but without avail. The defendant then made and presented an affidavit on the hearing of the motion for new trial setting forth his effort to get this newly discovered witness, and then stated what he believed would be his testimony if procured, and his belief that he could be found. We are inclined to think a sufficient showing of diligence has been made to entitle the defendant to a con[123]*123sideration of the evidence this absent witness would give if personally present. That part of the defendant’s affidavit is as follows:

“My name is Robt. Bursk; my residence is Logan county, Kansas;.that during the months of December, 1927, and January, 1928, I was working for Bruce Bierce and living at his place east of Oakley, Kan., in Gove county, Kansas, and that I was at his place during all of said period of time. That at said time the said Bursk was acquainted with the defendant Tom Hamed and Frank Carnes; that at no time during the above mentioned period of time did the said Tom Harned and Frank Carnes, or either of them, come to the home of Bruce Bierce, located as aforesaid about three miles east of Oakley, Kan., in Gove county, Kansas, in the nighttime, or any other time, and help the said Bruce Bierce butcher a cow and two hogs, or in fact help or assist in butchering any animal or animals of any sort or kind; that said Bursk was present at the said Bierce home every evening and night during the above mentioned period of time; that said Hamed and Carnes did not at any time during said period of time take breakfast or any other meal or meals at the Bierce home.”

Bierce is the name of the accessory witness, and he had testified that the defendant and Carnes had stayed for breakfast at his house, where the butchering was done.

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168 P. 847 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1917)
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170 P. 1052 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1918)
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204 P. 533 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1922)
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202 P. 616 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1921)
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207 P. 854 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1922)
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236 P. 841 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1925)
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271 P. 280 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 P. 910, 129 Kan. 120, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harned-kan-1929.