State v. Lott

56 P.2d 1029, 40 N.M. 147
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1936
DocketNo. 4101.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 P.2d 1029 (State v. Lott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Lott, 56 P.2d 1029, 40 N.M. 147 (N.M. 1936).

Opinion

BRICE, Justice.

The original opinion is withdrawn and this substituted.

The appellants were convicted of the theft of one neat cattle and sentenced to be imprisoned for a term in the state penitentiary. The grounds advanced for reversal are that neither venue nor appellants’ connection with the theft was proved.

The evidence and inferences tending to prove venue and theft, are as follows: L. O. Morgan was the owner of approximately 100 head of cattle, among which was a red-polled heifer about 16 months old, branded 1BIF on the left shoulder and side. He moved 14 head of these cattle, including this heifer, to the range of Adrian Turner, which included land in Lincoln and De Baca counties. The cattle were turned loose at a watering in Lincoln county about two miles from the De Baca county line, where it was expected they would range, though the range had a watering in De Ba-ca county, and nothing prevented the cattle from ranging in both counties. After the 4th of July, Morgan rounded up what cattle he could find in Lincoln county, around that watering, and took them back to his ranch. The red-polled heifer and some others were not among these cattle. On the 7th day of July, the appellant 'Park had the carcass of a young beef at his house in Lincoln county, a quarter of which was turned over to a brother of the appellant Lott. A witness testified that the two appellants, together, on the 8th day of July, 1934, were seen by him to take something from an autotruck to a well in De Baca county, which he thought they dropped into the well. This suspicious action on the part of appellants brought about a search, and the discovery in the well of the hide, hoofs, and ears of the red-polled heifer, identified by Morgan’s brand on the hide. The entrails of a neat cattle were found near the road where the truck stopped. The appellants admitted passing along the road near the well with a truck, hauling in it two horses (by which the truck was identified),' but denied any connection with the hide or entrails, or that the truck was stopped at or near the well, or that they went to the well. After being informed of this discovery, Morgan, on or about the 15th of July, gathered up the remainder of the cattle from the De Baca county' watering, and brought them to his ranch; the red-polled heifer only was missing. The distance from Park’s house to the places where the cattle ranged is not brought out plainly. Appellant Park stated he lived about 9 miles from the De Baca county line. Interrogated as to the distance in another direction to the De Baca county line, he claimed to be ignorant of it. The heifer was stolen some time between the two roundups.

(1) The jury was authorized to infer from the fact that as the heifer was not with the cattle gathered at the Lincoln county watering at the first roundup, it was at that time located at the De Baca county watering with the cattle that ranged there, and therefore must have been stolen from De Baca county, as it was stolen between the two roundups, and was the only animal missing. Venue was proved by substantial evidence.

(2) There is substantial evidence to prove that appellants, together, on the 8th day of July, 1934, took the hide, hoofs, and ears of the missing heifer and deposited them in an abandoned well in De Baca county, N. M., and dropped the entrails near the well. Appellants state in their brief on motion for rehearing: “Both of the defendants testified upon the witness stand, and both denied emphatically that they-were in possession of the hide, hoofs and/or entrails of the animal in De Baca County, and particularly at the place testified to by the State’s witness Gutierréz.”

However, the jury apparently just as emphatically disbelieved appellants’ story and believed the state’s witness. It seems there were three' witnesses to the depositing of the hide, etc., in the well, and only one was called by the state. This was not called to the attention of the trial court nor mentioned here at the original hearing. Of this failure to produce the witnesses, appellants state: “It appears from the evidence that the other two witnesses who were present at that time were never even called by the State as witnesses, although their names appear endorsed upon the information, and it further appears that they were residing at Bórica, within twenty miles from Fort Sumner, at the time of the trial.”

As appellants state, the names of the two witnesses mentioned were indorsed on the information; appellants were represented by able counsel, and would no doubt have had these witnesses in court if their testimony would have favored them.

Again appellants state in their brief: “In the case at bar we have the Court, in its opinion, distinctly recognizing the fact that the jury, in order to arrive at a verdict of guilty under the evidence, had to guess from the evidence, and that there was in fact no clear evidence to establish either the venue or to connect the defendants with the offense.”

It is seldom testimony more clear and convincing is found. The state’s witness testified, in-substance, that he and two other men were at a sheep camp some distance from the road; that two men, driving a truck with two horses in it, stopped, took something from the truck, carried it to, and appeared to have dropped it in, the well. The appellants admit they passed along the road in a truck with two horses in it, about the time claimed by the state witness, but deny that they went to the well at all, or even stopped the truck. One or the other testified falsely, and the jury believed the state’s witness. This being the case, it was not a “guess,” but positive affirmative testimony, and when coupled with the finding of the damaging evidence in the well, brought about by appellants’ suspicious actions, the proof is positive (not guesswork) that the appellants had in their possession the hide, ears, and hoofs of a heifer that had been stolen within two or three days of that time, and that they were concealing them for some purpose. The natural inference is that the purpose was to destroy the evidence of the identity of a recently stolen animal. Now only the thief would be interested in destroying or concealing the telltale hide with the owner’s brand, and the ea'rs with his mark thereon. In addition to this the appellant Park had the carcass of a young neat cattle in his possession the day before, and no attempt was made by appellants at the trial to account for its hide and ears. It would he easy for a jury, knowing the ways of cow thieves, to make the correct “guess” (if appellants’ counsel so considers it), with such testimony before them. . Appellants further state, after quoting from our former opinion: “We have quoted this language a second time in this memorandum for the purpose of showing as we contend, that the Court itself, in its opinion, clearly recognized that the verdict of the jury was, of necessity, under the testimony in this case, based on speculative inference rather than upon direct evidence or circumstantial evidence.”

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Bluebook (online)
56 P.2d 1029, 40 N.M. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lott-nm-1936.