State v. Hill

65 P. 518, 39 Or. 90, 1901 Ore. LEXIS 51
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 65 P. 518 (State v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Hill, 65 P. 518, 39 Or. 90, 1901 Ore. LEXIS 51 (Or. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion.

The defendant, James Hill, was tried upon an information charging him with the larceny of a mare, the property of one D. H. Shaffer, alleged to have been committed in Union County, Oregon, August 2, 1899 ; and, having been convicted thereof, he was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of two years, from which judgment he appeals.

Exceptions having been reserved, it is contended that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as re[91]*91quested by the defendant as follows: “(2) If you find from the evidence that the defendant had a claim to the mare, honestly entertained, even though he may have got her from a thief, he had a right to keep her until the question of ownership was settled ; and, if his claim of ownership was made honestly and in good faith, it was not larceny, and you should acquit. (3) The taking of property without the felonious intent to convert it to the taker’s own use is only a trespass, and openly taking is evidence of the absence of such intent. The criminal intent is what distinguishes larceny from trespass ; and, if you find that the defendant did not attempt to take the animal clandestinely or attempt to conceal her, you may consider this fact to negative the question of larcenous intent, and your verdict should be not guilty.” To render the instructions so requested intelligible, it is deemed necessary to state the substance of the testimony upon the subject to which they relate. The transcript shows that about March 10, 1899, D. H. Shaffer was the owner of a black mare, which he turned out on the range to pasture, and did not again see until about the first of October of that year, when he found her in the defendant’s possession, about four miles from his place ; that, upon the defendant’s refusal to deliver the mare on demand, Shaffer instituted an action for her recovery, and secured the possession thereof. The defendant, as a witness in his own behalf, explaining his possession, testified, in effect, that about August 21,1899, he, in presence of his brothers, George and Leonard, having met a stranger in the public road riding the mare in question, he traded with him, giving him therefor a gray mare ; that after the exchange was effected the stranger rode with them to their father’s farm, where they parted company ; and that said stranger was seen by their father as he passed his place riding the mare which he received [92]*92from the witness. The defendant’s testimony is corroborated by that’of his brothers, George and Leonard, and by that of his father in respect to seeing the stranger pass his place riding the gray mare.

1. Considering these requests in their order, the first, which is numbered two, seems to be predicated upon the assumption that the action being tried was to recover the possession of the mare, or at least that the defendant was entitled to retain such possession until the right thereto could be determined in a proper action. The transcript shows that, prior to the defendant’s trial upon the information for the larceny of the mare, Shaffer had secured the possession in an action therefor. If the court had been requested to instruct the jury that if they should find the defendant traded for the mare, even if he knew that the person with whom he traded had stolen her, he could not be convicted under an information charging him with the crime of larceny, and they must acquit him, it would have been error not to give it; for'such an instruction could have been predicated upon the defendant’s theory of the facts of the case, and was not included in the court’s general charge, to which no exception was taken. Neither honesty nor good faith was required of the defendant, as elements of his possession of the mare, if he did not take her, to constitute a defense, when charged with the larceny thereof: People v. Ward, 105 Cal. 652 (39 Pac. 33); Faulkner v. State, 15 Tex. App. 115 ; Clayton v. State, 15 Tex. App. 348 ; Phillips v. State, 19 Tex. App. 158. Unless the defendant took the mare, or participated in her taking, which is one of the necessary elements of larceny, he could not be legally convicted thereof : Curlin v. State, 23 Tex. App. 681 (5 S. W. 186). If he had traded for the mare, knowing or having good reason to believe that she had been stolen, he could have been punished upon [93]*93conviction of that offense, if properly charged: Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 1774 ; State v. Pomeroy, 30 Or. 16 (46 Pac. 797) ; State v. Hanna, 35 Or. 195 (57 Pac. 629). The instruction so requested being faulty in the particular specified, no error was committed in refusing to give it.

2. There- was. no testimony tending to show that a question of trespass was involved, and hence no necessity existed to distinguish between a tort of that character and the crime of larceny. If the court had been requested to charge that if the jury should find that the defendant made no attempt to conceal the mare, but publicly rode or drove her in the immediate vicinity in which Shaffer lived, so that he might have been able to see and recognize her, they might consider such fact as a circumstance tending to negative a taking by the defendant, it might have been proper to give it: Jones v. State, 64 Am. Dec. 175. The second instruction contains so many hypothetical elements not involved in the testimony introduced at the trial, that no error was committed in refusing to give it.

3. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, based upon his affidavit to the effect that prior to his trial he made every effort within his power to discover the name and residence of the person from whom he received the mare with the larceny of which he was charged; that since said trial he had received information through James Allen and Robert Wright, who live in Wallowa County, Oregon, but whose affidavits he was unable to secure on account of their absence from home, that the name of said person is Henry Wilkins, who resides at some point in Harney County, Oregon ; that Wilkins will testify that while on the road from Wallowa County to Harney County he met the affiant, to whom he traded [94]*94said mare, which he purchased in Wallowa County from James Allen ; that, if a new trial is granted, affiant will be able to procure Wilkins, Allen, and Wright as witnesses, who will severally testify as here indicated ; that since said trial affiant has received reliable information from J. A. Spray and other sources that one Frank Rynearson, who lives in Wallowa County, and from whom Shaffer claims to have obtained said mare, will testify that the animal he let him have is not the one affiant is accused and convicted of stealing, and is not the property of Shaffer ; that affiant wrote letters and made diligent inquiry to find out these facts prior to his trial; and that the information now received is the result of such search, but it came too late to be used at his trial. The defendant also filed the affidavit of one J. A. Spray to the effect that prior to defendant’s trial he had a conversation with Shaffer, who told him that, having written to said Rynearson, he received an answer informing him that the mare described in his letter was not the one he sold him, and that he did not want Rynearson for a witness, because his testimony would prove that the mare which the defendant was charged with stealing was not his (Shaffer’s) property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P. 518, 39 Or. 90, 1901 Ore. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hill-or-1901.