State v. Hoggard

68 P.2d 1092, 146 Kan. 1, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 12, 1937
DocketNo. 32,924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 P.2d 1092 (State v. Hoggard) 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. Hoggard, 68 P.2d 1092, 146 Kan. 1, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 97 (kan 1937).

Opinion

[2]*2The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment and sentence for the crime of grand larceny.

The state charged and its evidence tended to prove that Jim Hoggard and one Jack Miller conspired to and did steal $600 from Ernest Wulfkuhle, a farmer who resided near Big Springs. Defendant and one Ketchum called at Wulfkuhle’s farm and told him they were seeking a pasture for three race horses, that the father of defendant owned the horses and would pay $5 per day for their keep. Wulfkuhle agreed to keep the horses on those terms, and defendant told him to come to the Throop Hotel in Topeka the next day to sign the pasture contract with defendant’s father. Next day Wulfkuhle came to the hotel. Ketchum was on the outlook for him, and showed him to a room where defendant and Jack Miller invited him to play cards. He said he did not understand the game. Ketchum volunteered to assist him. After some time there was a telephone call, apparently a spurious one, which pretended to convey the news that the truck which was supposed to be bringing the race horses from Kansas City had broken down hear Perry, and that the arrival of the horses would be delayed. On the assurance that Ketchum would coach him, Wulfkuhle participated in a pretended game of stud poker, which was apparently played by dealing five cards, one at a time, to each of the players. The players privately inspected the first card dealt and laid it face down on the table. Ketchum had seen Wulfkuhle’s first card and when three more cards had been dealt face up to the players Ketchum assured Wulfkuhle that he already had an unbeatable hand. After some discussion, Wulfkuhle was persuaded to go with Ketchum to Lawrence and get $600 in cash to bet on this unbeatable hand. To preserve the 'status quo until that journey was taken Wulfkuhle’s hand was sealed in one envelope, Jack Miller’s hand in another, and the remainder of the deck in a third; and Ketchum, the adviser of Wulfkuhle, took charge of the three sealed envelopes. When Wulfkuhle and Ketchum returned from Lawrence with the money, and the hands were shown, Miller’s hand was the stronger. He took the money, and he and defendant immediately disappeared. Ketchum made some remark about seeing the victim some time later, and followed the others. Such was. the culmination of the pretended hunt for a pasture for race horses which apparently never [3]*3existed, but which served to scrape up an acquaintance with a farmer who naturally enough would be pleased to get $5 per day for pasturing three race horses.

The state’s evidence also tended to show that the real name of Ketchum was Roy Hoggard and that he was a brother of defendant. The trio, defendant, Miller and Ketchum, were arrested a few days later in St. Joseph, Mo.

Touching the errors relied on to reverse the judgment, defendant first complains of the overruling of his motion for a continuance on account of the absence of Miller and Ketchum who, he averred, were important witnesses in his behalf. Neither the abstract nor brief gives any intimation about what evidence they would have given if their presence had been procured. The trial was had between December 12 and December 16, 1935. The motion for a new trial was not argued until January 4, 1936, twenty days after the verdict was rendered; but even at that late date defendant made no showing that if Miller and Ketchum had been present, their evidence, or the evidence of either, would probably have brought about a different verdict, or at least might have averted a verdict of guilty. Moreover, this defendant was arrested in July, and was bound over for trial in October. His trial was set for December 12, and all the record shows as to his diligence in procuring the attendance of these witnesses is that on the day before the trial he received two telegrams. One of these was from the wife of Jack Miller, which stated that she had received a letter from Jack, mailed in St. Louis, that he was on his way to Detroit, but would be in Topeka for the trial. If any significance were to be given to that telegram, it would be that no continuance would be necessary. And while Miller failed to arrive according to his letter, even twenty days later no explanation of his absence was forthcoming. The other telegram was from a woman who managed a hotel in Kansas City, which read:

“Ketchum stayed here, been gone two weeks, baggage still here.”

No court would be justified in postponing an important criminal trial on such a slim showing of diligence to procure the attendance of witnesses, or om such manifest uncertainty as to their later appearance if a continuance were granted, especially when the state had summoned its witnesses and had made preparation to try the case on the date set.

The next error is based on the contention that the facts charged in the information did not constitute a public offense. It is argued [4]*4that the winning of money on a poker game is neither grand nor petit larceny, which is true, of course (State v. Terry, 141 Kan. 922, 44 P. 2d 258); but the state’s theory was that the prosecuting witness was deprived of his money by means of a pretended poker game, which was quite a different affair from a game of cards where men risk their money partly on their skill and partly on the elements of chance. Gullible men have often been robbed of their money and property on simulated games of chance or skill, or both, on simulated card games, simulated foot races, simulated horse races. To deprive a man of his money by such means is uniformly regarded as larceny. In State v. Flaherty, 103 Kan. 393, 173 Pac. 919, the defendant was convicted of the larceny of a large sum of money from the prosecuting witness by inducing him to bet on a pretended horse race. This court affirmed the judgment, quoting with approval an excerpt from 17 R. C. L. 16, where it is said:

“ ‘Obtaining money under the pretense that it is to be bet on a race, and with the intent at the time to convert it to the bailee’s own use, the race being a mere sham to aid this purpose, is larceny.’ ”

In the opinion the court cited Doss v. The People, 158 Ill. 660, 41 N. E. 1093, where the conviction of a defendant for the crime of larceny committed by the means of a fake foot race was reviewed and affirmed. The first section of the syllabus sufficiently states the case for present purposes:

“Obtaining possession of money for the pretended purpose of making a wager for the owner’s benefit on a sham race, which is so carried out that the owner is declared to have lost the wager, constitutes larceny, when the owner did not intend to part with the title, but merely with the possession of his money, and it was obtained from him with intent to convert it.”

Another case cited in this court’s opinion in State v. Flaherty, supra, is State v. Dobbins, 152 Ia. 632, 132 N. W. 805, 42 L. R. A., n. s., 735 and note, where it was held that one who induces another to put up his money on a pretended horse race, for the purpose of getting others to bet, under the promise that it would be returned as soon as it has served its purpose, but in reality with the intent of the stakeholder to convert it to the use of several coconspirators, including the promisor, is, if the intent is carried out, guilty of larceny. In the opinion an early Michigan case, People v. Shaw, 57 Mich. 403, 24 N. W. 121, was quoted with approval, thus:

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Related

State v. Ransom
661 P.2d 392 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1983)
State v. Guthrie
391 P.2d 95 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
68 P.2d 1092, 146 Kan. 1, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hoggard-kan-1937.