State v. Hester

218 N.W. 616, 205 Iowa 1047
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 N.W. 616 (State v. Hester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hester, 218 N.W. 616, 205 Iowa 1047 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

— The appellants, are two sisters and a brother. At the time of the larceny, the defendants were aged, respectively, Edith Hester, 16, Darrell Hester, 21, and Bernice Peterson, 25. Bernice Peterson was divorced from her husband, and the three children liv.ed with their mother, four miles northwest of Modale. After the time of the commission of the crime, Bernice Peterson married a man by the name of McKay. The three children and William Hillman were jointly indicted for the larceny of chickens from a coop, which larceny occurred on the evening of June 5, 1926. The three appellants had a joint. *1048 trial, -were-- each- .-found guilty, and the court pronounced judgment upon Bernice Peterson McKay of confinement in the women’s reformatory at Rockwell City for a period not exceeding two years. The judgment upon Darrell Hester was that he be confined in the reformatory at Anamosa, for a period not exceeding two years; and as to Edith Hester, the cause was transferred to the juvenile court, and she was ordered confined in the girls’ industrial school at Mitchellville until she attain the age of 21 years, unless sooner legally discharged.

At the close of the State’s evidence, the defendants made a motion for directed verdict, which was renewed at the close of all the evidence, which motions were by the court overruled.

. Only two questions are presented on this appeal: First, the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant a conviction, and second, the claim of the appellants that the punishment is excessive.

The Parker family consists of Mr. and Mrs.. Parker- and their daughter, Marjorie, eight years of age. On the evening of June 5, 1926, the Parker family was absent from home until midnight or later. Mrs. Parker was the owner of 96 chickens about a month old, and all except approximately a half dozen of same were of the Buff Orpington breed, the remainder being mixed.. These chickens, together with ducks, had at times been fed-buttermilk, and the Parkers testified that during the. evening they had fed them buttermilk, which was spattered by the ducks and otherwise over the chickens, and that the buttermilk, with the dust settling thereon, had dried on the chickens, until in this manner they were quite distinguishable. At the time of the Parkers’ departure from the home, these 96 chickens were left in a box on the front porch. The yard was inclosed by a fence, and the front gate closed. At the time of their return that night, the front gate was open, and the box and chickens therein were gone.

The Parker home is situated in the northwest corner of two crossroads, and three miles directly west of the town of Modale. The Hester home, four miles northwest of Modale, is situated one mile north, one mile east, and then one mile north of the Parker home. The direct route from the Hester home to Mo-dale is to travel one mile south therefrom, then one mile east, then one mile south, and one mile east into Modale. There is no dispute that the three defendants and Hillman were at Modale *1049 sometime before midnight of June 5th. They were traveling in an old rickety buggy, to which were hitched a mule and a horse, one of the parties riding another horse. The three defendants testified that they left the Hester home between 8 and 9 o’clock, and went the direct route, hereinbefore mentioned, to Modale, arriving there between 9 and 10 o’clock.

The Parkers arose early on the morning of June 6th, and in going to the road in front of the house, ascertained tracks of a buggy, and apparently those of a mule and a horse, which came from the north and went in an easterly direction toward Modale. They also observed, in various portions of the highway, tracks apparently of another horse, coming from the same direction, and apparently bound for the same destination-. They got in their ear and pursued the backward course of the tracks to the Hester home. After obtaining a search warrant, the three Parkers and two others, including the marshal of Mo-dale, appeared at the Hester home, and there, in a shed, they found 92 young living chickens penned up in the corner. There were four dead chickens lying in close proximity, making the 96 which the Parkers claimed. The Parkers swore positively' to the identity of said chickens, by reason of their general appearance, which answered the description of their. chickens, and .especially by reason of the marks thereon from the feeding of • the buttermilk hereinbefore mentioned. The little girl was positive in her identification of some of the chickens, which she called her “pets.”

A neighbor living one mile north of the Parker home testified that he saw such an outfit as was driven by the Hesters and Hillman pass his house in the direction of the Parker home about 9:30 in the evening, and that he recognized the voice of one of the crew as being that of the defendant Darrell Hester.-

Another witness testified that, about 10:30 that night, he saw the defendants about 40 rods east of the Parker place, — ■ Hillman riding a horse, the girls in the front part of the buggy, and a boy in the back part, sitting on a kind of a box.

Another witness testified that, about 10:40 P. M., he saw the defendants and Bill Hillman in the road at the corner one mile west from Modale, not traveling, but standing there in the road■ that he flashed his light upon them and recognized them ■; that the three defendants were in the buggy, and Hillman be *1050 hind the buggy, standing by the gray horse; that he did not see anything other than the defendants in the buggy, at that time; that there is a cornfield west of the road. This corner is on the direct route from Modale to the Hester home.

The marshal of Modale testified that, on tire morning of June 6th, he followed the tracks from the Hester place down to the Parker place, and from there to Modale, and back to the Hester place; that one wheel on the left-hand side wabbled quite a little; that from Modale they went west, then north, then west, and then straight north to the Hester place.

The defendants testified that, on their return from Modale, they did not go the same route which they claim to have traveled in going from the Hester home to Modale, but took a different route, past the home of the father-in-law of their brother, to see if the brother was there. But finding that his car was not at the home of the father-in-law, they went on, coming into the Hester home from the north, instead of the south.

The defendants left Modale about 12:30 A. M., arriving home about an hour later. The marshal of Modale testified that he saw them in Modale, but did not know when it was, but it was after he rang the curfew at 9 o’clock. Other Avitnesses testified that they saAV them in Modale at a late hour, — from 11:30 to 12:30 o’clock.

In the shed where the chickens hereinbefore mentioned were found, were others, some much younger, and of various colors. It is claimed by the defendants that the chickens in question belonged to their mother, and the mother so claimed on the morning of June 6th. The mother Avas not used as a witness at the trial. The defendants assert that their mother, at the time in question, had 150 to 160 little chickens, and only 50 or 60 of them were Buff Orpingtons, and the remainder white and mixed. They testified that they first bought from a Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Harless
86 N.W.2d 210 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1957)
Hansen v. State
236 N.W. 329 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1931)
State v. Manly
233 N.W. 110 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
State v. Salisbury
227 N.W. 589 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 N.W. 616, 205 Iowa 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hester-iowa-1928.