State v. McCracken

18 P.2d 302, 93 Mont. 269, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 3
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1933
DocketNo. 7,047.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 302 (State v. McCracken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. McCracken, 18 P.2d 302, 93 Mont. 269, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 3 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CAULA WAT

delivered the opinion of the court.

William McCracken, Nig Hickey and Earl Music were accused of stealing a gelding. They pleaded not guilty to the information. McCracken, tried separately, was found guilty and has appealed from the judgment entered upon the jury’s verdict. Upon motion of the county attorney the case was dismissed as to Hickey and Music.

*271 The evidence shows that the animal described in the information, a sorrel gelding branded MA on the right shoulder, the property of Amos Burnside, was seen by its owner on the open range near the Burnside ranch in Carter county, Montana, about Christmas, 1930; and it tends to show that in January, 1931, this gelding was in a field of McCracken’s with other horses, twenty or more; among them were horses belonging to Simon M. Oliver, a ranchman living in the neighborhood — -the country is spacious, and while some of these men lived ten miles or more apart they referred to one another as neighbors.

Reuben Harper, who was then living a short distance south of the Montana-Wyoming line, passed this field twice at intervals a week apart in January, 1931, and on both occasions saw these horses therein. He knew the Oliver horses well, and reported to Oliver, who was his father-in-law, that the horses were there. In the early morning of February 5, 1931, it was “just nicely daylight,” Harper said, he observed Hickey and Music driving the bunch of horses he had seen in the Mc-Cracken field in a southerly direction, toward Moorcroft, Wyoming. He recognized the Oliver horses. That evening he told Mr. Oliver what he had seen, and the next morning the two started for Moorcroft, traveling in Oliver’s ear. When they came within two or three miles of that town they overtook the horses being driven by Hickey and Music. There were five head of Oliver’s horses in the bunch. From their starting point Harper and Oliver had driven between fifty and sixty miles. They then went into Moorcroft, where they spent the night. McCracken was in Moorcroft that evening and spent the night there, as did Hickey and Music. The next morning Oliver and Harper found Oliver’s horses five miles south of Moorcroft; they had been driven up a lane. The main bunch of horses was north of the highway, right close to Moorcroft. There was a sorrel horse among them.

At two points during the presentation of the state’s case, counsel for the defendant moved to strike out the testimony relating to the Oliver horses, on the ground that it had *272 not been shown that McCracken was connected with the act of driving them from his pasture to the vicinity of Moorcroft. The court overruled both motions. It is claimed that the court erred in so doing, but we do not see it. The Oliver horses were in McCracken’s possession, in his pasture, and Hickey and Music were his employees. The fact that the Oliver horses were separated from the bunch and driven miles away after Oliver, the owner, and his son-in-law, had overtaken the drivers near Moorcroft, has a relevant bearing. In the absence of a contrary showing, it might reasonably be inferred by the jury, the surrounding facts and circumstances considered, that it was the design of McCracken, Hickey and Music to ship the Oliver horses as the others were shipped, and that this design would have been carried into effect if it had not been for the appearance of Oliver and Harper. At any rate, the testimony was admissible as a part of the res gestae. (State v. Broadwater, 75 Mont. 350, 243 Pac. 587.)

In tracing the asportation of the sorrel gelding from the McCracken pasture to the place where McCracken disposed of him, Randolph, Iowa, it was relevant to show all the acts and circumstances accompanying the asportation, even if the evidence showed or tended to show the .asportation of other horses on the same expedition. Moreover, “in making proof against the defendant, it is competent for the prosecution to put in evidence all relevant facts and circumstances which tend to establish any of the constituent elements of the crime of which the defendant is accused in the ease on trial, even though such facts and circumstances tend to prove that the defendant has committed other crimes.” (8 R. C. L. 199.)

The horses were inspected by a deputy sheriff at Moorcroft in the presence of McCracken, Hickey and Music; McCracken assisted Parks, the inspecting officer, in the work. McCracken at the time of the inspection produced a bill of sale purporting to bear the signature of Charles Gr. Meyer and to transfer to McCracken ten head of horses. Special attention was directed to the sorrel gelding by the inspecting officer, who called the brand on the horse MA, while the bill of sale called for the *273 brand M4; and there appeared to be some difference between the inspector and McCracken as to horses described in the bill of sale as “diamond cross.” The officer said to McCracken on inspecting the brand upon the horses, “The cross looks like a blotch in the center of this diamond,” to which Mc-Cracken replied that the cross was so small it looked like a blotch. Apparently the inspector took McCracken’s word for it.

'The evidence tends to show that the horses claimed by Mc-Cracken to have been branded with the diamond cross were in fact branded with a diamond dot, and were the property of Casey Brothers, who were neighbors of McCracken.

At Randolph, Iowa, McCracken sold the gelding described in the information, and another horse belonging to Burnside; both were in the shipment.

McCracken testified that he did not drive the horses to Moorcroft for shipment; they were driven by his employees Hickey and Music, and he himself went to Moorcroft in a car; he did not see the horses after they left his pasture until they got to Moorcroft; when they got there they were put in the stockyards. He said he did not have the Oliver horses in his bunch. He claimed the “M4 horse” and the “diamond cross” horses were among the ten head which he bought from Charles G. Meyer, and that they were included in the bill of sale which he exhibited to the inspecting officer at Moorcroft; he knew Burnside’s brand to be MA bar on the right shoulder.

He testified that when he was at Randolph he discovered “some of the brands, ot one of the brands, on the bill of sale didn’t correspond with the animal” which he had shipped. He said, “How I discovered that, or how that happened, I caught this horse and in catching him in the corral he got kind of sweated up and his hair kind of laid down on him, and I noticed then that there had been a mistake or misunderstanding in the brand; this horse had a MA bar on him. I was not excited in any way that time about shipping a MA bar horse, because Mr. Burnside told me on two different occasions to ship his horses; so I did not think a thing about that.” He *274 testified further that two or three days after he arrived home from Omaha he heard there was difficulty about the shipment of the MA bar horses; he heard Mr. Burnside said someone had shipped some of his horses; so he went to see Mr. Bum-side, told him he had shipped two of his horses, and offered to pay for them.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 302, 93 Mont. 269, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccracken-mont-1933.