State v. Mahoney

97 N.W. 1089, 122 Iowa 168
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 97 N.W. 1089 (State v. Mahoney) 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. Mahoney, 97 N.W. 1089, 122 Iowa 168 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Deemer, O. J.

At about ten o’clock in the evening of December 20, 1902, the night watchman of the Shannon Mott Flour Mills, in the city of Des Moines, discovered a light in a small building used by the company for an office. This light disappeared, then reappeared, only to be extinguished and again appear. Surmising that something was wrong, the watchman crawled along the south side of the building to its front on • Fifteenth street, and when near the southeast corner of the 'building discovered the defendant standing in a recess or alcove in the build, ing where he would practically be out of sight, looking up Fifteenth northward toward its junction with Walnut street. A policeman had a few minutes before passed up this street, and disappeared at Walnut. The watchman immediately placed defendant under arrest,-defendant asking him at the time to wait a minute, saying that he wished to watch there a few minutes for a train. There’ was no railway depot near the office, but the main line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad r.an within sixty feet of the building, and some of the "tracks in its yard were within twenty or thirty feet of the office. The night was dark and foggy, and the roads were muddy [170]*170Shortly after defendant’s arrest some one, who had apparently been in the building, was heard to jump out of the west window thereof, and start to run away. The night watchman saw him, and, pushing the defendant ahead for protection, began firing at the fleeing man, holding the revolver so close to defendant that defendant says the powder burned his ear. None of the shots took effect, but the watchman, on account of the presence of the defendant, was obliged to forego any further attempt to intercept the fleeing man. Defendant was taken to a drug store, and there held until he could be turned over to the police force; which was done as soon as they could be notified of the arrest. After the defendant had been safely lodged in jail the watchman returned to the office, and there found certain officials of the Shannon Mott Company, who it appears had in the meantime been notified of the arrest. An investigation was immediately made of the building, and it was discovered that some one had been in the building, had lighted several matches therein, and had been around the iron safe which stood in the office. Attempt was made to follow the man at whom the watchman discharged his revolver, but without success.

Defendant was indicted for an attempt at breaking and entering the building, and of course might be convicted if the evidence showed that he was an accomplice 1. attempt to break and enter: accomplice: evidence. in the crime or aided and abetted some person in breaking and entering the building. On the trial defendant accounted for his presence at the office, and at the place where he was found, by saying he was there to catch a freight train on the railway which passed near the building, in order that he might steal a ride to Boone. He accounted for his position by saying that he was there to protect himself from the inclemency of the weather. But in giving his account he said that he had come down from Ames on the Chicago & Northwestern Railway at three or four o’clock [171]*171in the afternoon to go to Boone, which, as is well known, is on the Chicago & Northwestern Railway, as also is Ames. As Boone is about as far from .Des Moines as from Ames, defendant’s story that he came to Des Moines from Ames to get to Boone is, to say the least of it, highly improbable.

When arrested defendant was in a position so that he could see what was going on in the office, and he was evidently watching the policeman who had passed by the building but a few minutes before, and after his arrest he did that which one accused of such a crime would naturally do; that is to say, he tried to get the watchman to wait a minute, in order that the man in the building might escape.

Of course, his mere presence at the office would not be sufficient in itself to justify his conviction as an accessory to the crime, but this, with other circumstances, taken in connection with the fact that he made various contradictory statements regarding his seeing the other man, who fled at about the time of his arrest, and his unreasonable account of how he happened to be in Des Moines and at the particular place, was sufficient to justify the court and jury in believing that he was guilty of the offense charged.

II. The third instruction given by the court is challenged on several grounds. It reads as follows: “You have observed that the charge is that defendant attempted to break and enter said buildiug with intent to commit a larceny. If another man than the defendant feloniously broke and entered said building, with intent to commit - a larceny, he must have first attempted to do so before consummating the breaking and entering, and if the defendant was concerned in the commission of that offense, and co-operating with the person committing it in its commission, then he is chargeable with the attempt made by such a person the same as if he had made the attempt himself. [172]*172If such a breaking and entering was-with intent to commit a larceny, and the defendant was concerned in the commission of the breaking and entering with that intent, he is chargeable with such an intent. If yon find beyond a reasonable, well-founded doubt, upon all the evidence, that the defendant did thus attempt to break and enter said building, and the said attempt to break and enter was with intent to commit a larceny, then you will find him guilty, but if, upon a view of the whole evidence, you have a reasonable doubt of his guilt as charged, you will acquit him.” The defendant asked no instructions, but he says this one is erroneous, first, because he was charged with an attempt to break and enter, and there is a, fatal variance between the’allegations and the proofs; second, because of the use of the words “being concerned in” and “co-operating with” without definition or explanation; third, because there was no evidence that defendant was an accomplice; fourth, because the court did not define reasonable doubt; and, fifth, because of the use of the words “well-founded” in the latter part of the instruction. Of these in their'order. It will be observed that the court virtually covered the entire case, aside from the mere formal matters in this one instruction. • There is no objection to this, if the instruction is in fact correct as applied to the facts, apd is not misleading or too much involved.

There was no variance between the allegations and the proof. In a sense the commission of an offense involves an attempt to commit it. It may not be a degree 2. allegations: proof: variance. of the main offense, nor be necessarily in- . . eluded therein, so as to require the court to charge with reference thereto in every case where the commission of an offense is charged. But, as the greater includes the less, it is manifest that in every case where an attempt is charged proof of the actual commission of the offense establishes the attempt. If the offender actually commits the offense, he necessarily attempted to do [173]*173it, and. proof of the commission of tbe .actual offense do^s not constitute a variance. We have held that a conviction of petit larceny before a justice of tbe peace is a bar to a subsequent prosecution for larceny from tbe person based on the same transaction. The only reason for such a holding was that the one is so involved in the other that an acquittal for one is a bar to the other. Other illustrations might be given, but this will suffice.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.W. 1089, 122 Iowa 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mahoney-iowa-1904.