State v. Hodge

50 N.H. 510
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 N.H. 510 (State v. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hodge, 50 N.H. 510 (N.H. 1869).

Opinion

Dob, J.

The defendant’s counsel claims that “ the State relies on the possession by the respondent of the articles alleged to be stolen that “ possession of stolen goods, which will justify conviction, must be recent and exclusivethat “ the State has not actually proved either possession by the respondent of the articles alleged to be stolen, or ©ccupaney of the room in which they were found, much less exclusive possession and that the court erred in refusing'to instruct the jury, as requested, that the evidence was not sufficient to authorize a verdict against him.

It has been generally understood, that the prisoner’s exclusive and unexplained possession of stolen property recently after the theft, raises the presumption that he is the thief, and that this presumption takes the burden of proof from the prosecutor and lays it upon the prisoner. 2 East P. C„ 656; Boscoe Or. Ev. 18 ; J. F. Stephen Cr. L. 303, 304; 1 Ben. and Heard L. G. O. 860-372, 1st ed.; and cases cited in 2 Bishop Gr. Proc., § 701. When the defendant’s possession of stolen property has been the only evidence relied upon to convict Mm, judges have directed an acquittal because they held the possession was not recent, or was not exclusive, or was explained. Trials [512]*512have proceeded upon the ground that it was for the court to determine whether the possession proved was recent enough, or exclusive enough, or explained enough, to shift the burden of proof, and that, if the burden of proof was not thus shifted by the court, the defendant was entitled to an acquittal. The court has decided, not whether there was any evidence, however slight, to be submitted to the jury, but whether there was a presumption which shifted the burden of proof. This practice was formerly so common, that it came to be regarded as the application of a rule of law, and is so laid down in many books of high authority.

In this case, the defendant claims that the evidence does not bring him within the supposed rule in relation to possession of stolen property, and that the court should have ordered his acquittal. It becomes necessary, therefore, to inquire whether there is any such rule of law as has been supposed, and what the rule is, if there is one, and whether this case comes within it. It is obvious, at the outset, that if there is such a rule, the presumption which it draws from the evidence must be a presumption of law declared by the court, as distinguished from a presumption of fact found by the jury. The first practical difficulty in the way of making it a presumption of law is the impossibility of inventing a rule by which to determine whether the possession is recent or not.

Cockin’s Case, 2 Lewin C. C. 285, was an indictment for stealing two sacks, found in the defendant’s possession about twenty days after they were missed. Coleridge, J., said to the jury: “ If I was now to lose my watch, and in a few minutes it was to be found on the person of one of you, it would afford the strongest ground for presuming that you had stolen it; but if a month hence it were to be found in your possession, the presumption of your having stolen it would be greatly weakened, because stolen property usually passes through many hands.” In a valuable note to this case, the reporter says : “ The question, however, of distance of time and recent possession must be at all times one of fact under the circumstances, and a jury under the judge’s direction must decide.”

Rex v. Partridge, 7 C. and P. 551, was an indictment for stealing two pieces of woolen unfinished cloth, found in the defendant’s possession about two months after it was missed. The defendant contended that the length of time that had elapsed since the loss of the cloth was so great, that there was no presumption of guilt raised against him by the possession of it. But Patterson, J., said: “ I think the length of time is to be considered with reference to the nature of the articles which are stolen. If they are such as pass from hand to hand readily, two months would be a long time; but here that is not so. It is a question for the jury.”

Rex v. Adams, 3 C. and P. 600, was an indictment for stealing an axe, a saw, and a mattock, found in the defendant’s possession three months after they were missed. “ Mr. Justice J. Parke directed an acquittal without calling on the prisoner for his defence, observing, that a possession of stolen property three months after it was lost was not [513]*513such a recent possession as to put the prisoner upon showing how he came by it.” In Reg. v. Hewlett, 2 Russell on Crimes 728, note r, by Greaves: “Where the only evidence against the prisoner was, that three sheets were found upon his bed in his house three calendar months after they had been stolen, and it was urged that this was too long a time after the larceny to call on the prisoner to give any account how he had become possessed of them, — and Rex v. Adams * * * was relied on, — Wightman, J., held that the case must go to the jury, as it seemed to him that it was impossible to lay down any definite rule as to the precise time which was too great to call upon the prisoner to give an account of the possession; and that in this case that was some evidence, although very slight, for the jury to consider.”

In Rex v. Dewhirst, 2 Stark. Ev. 449, note z: “Where seventy sheep were put on Thornly Common, on the 18th of June, and were not missed till November, and the prisoner was in possession of four of those sheep in October, and of nineteen other of them on the 23d of November, Bayley, J., allowed evidence of both to be given.” Where a horse, alleged to have been stolen; was not traced to the possession of .the prisoner until six months from the date of the robbery, Maulé, J., directed an acquittal. R. v. Cooper, 3 C. and K. 318; Roscoe Cr. Ev. 20, 6th Am. ed. Reg. v. Cruttenden, 6 Jurist 267, was an indictment for larceny of a shovel. Gurney, B., instructed the jury: “ I have frequently had occasion to tell you, gentlemen, that when property, proved to be stolen, is found, shortly after the theft, in the possession of a party, that person is to be presumed to be the thief unless he explain satisfactorily how he came by it. But in this case I do not think the possession of this shovel sufficiently recent to raise that presumption against the prisoner. A period of six months has elapsed since the property was lost, in.which time it might have passed through several hands; the prisoner was not at his home when it was found there; and, upon the whole, J think it will be safer to acquit him without calling on him for his defence.”

Reg. v. Evans, 2 Cox C. C. 270, S. C. 1 Ben. and H. L. C. C. 363, 1st ed., was an indictment for stealing a beetle-head, found in the defendant’s possession fifteen months after it was missed. “Alderson, B., summed up: In cases where property of such insignificant value as that laid in this indictment is shown to have been stolen so long as fifteen months before it is discovered in' the possession of a stranger, that person ought not to be called on to answer for that possession on a charge of felony; for it might reasonably be inferred that he had come honestly by it in that long interval, reference being always had to the character and value of the thing itself.”

State v. Williams, 9 Ired. 140, 143, 148, was an indictment for stealing a slave, who ran away from his master twenty days before he was' found in the defendant’s possession.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.H. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hodge-nh-1869.