State v. Morrow

266 N.W. 154, 64 S.D. 230, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 35
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1936
DocketFile No. 7756.
StatusPublished

This text of 266 N.W. 154 (State v. Morrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Morrow, 266 N.W. 154, 64 S.D. 230, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 35 (S.D. 1936).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

On the night of July 26, 1933, the sheriff of Brown'county, S. D., was called by one Paul Lukas who informed him that he (Lukas) had shot an unidentified boy out near Lukas’ chicken house. The body of the child was removed to undertaking parlors at Aberdteen where it was identified the next morning by James A. Morrow, a farmer, as that of his 11 j^ear old son, Johnny Morrow. That same morning one John A. Meyer, a hired hand on the James A. Morrow farm, was arrested on a charge of burglary. Meyer was tried, convicted and sentenced to a term of 10 3-ears in the penitentiary. Following the Meyer trial Paul Lukas was tried for manslaughter for the death of Johnny Morrow, and was acquitted. Thereafter, an information was filed against James *231 A. Morrow, the father of the deceased child, charging him with being an accessory to the commission of the crime of grand larceny. A portion of the information reads as follows: “Did commit the crime of being an accessory to the commission of the crime of Grandl Larceny, * * * did wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously conceal and aid one John A. Meyer, after the said John A. Meyer had, on the 26th day of July, 1933, then and there committed a felony, to-wit: Grand Larceny, which felony was committed by said John A. Meyer, as follows: That at said time and place said John A. Meyer did wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously, and by means of fraud and stealth, take, steal, andl carry away poultry, being the personal property of Paul Lukas and Max Stokes, to-wit: Eight (8) chickens, of the value of Four ($4.00) Dollars, with intent then and there to deprive the owner thereof; and the said James A. Morrow, at said time and times and place of said concealing and aiding said John A. Meyer, then and there having knowledge that said felony had been committed! by said John A. Meyer, and with the intent then and there on the part of said James A. Morrow that said John A. Meyer might avoid arrest and escape from arrest, trial and conviction.”

John A. Meyer, mentioned in the information as a felon who-had committed the larceny of the poultry, and who had been previously convicted of burglary and sentenced to a term of 10 years in the penitentiary, was the chief witness for the state against the defendant herein. His testimony is to the effect that he and Johnny Morrow, defendant’s son, broke into a neighbor’s chicken house and stole eight chickens; that Johnny Morrow was shot and killed -during the theft. Lukas, who fired the shot, thereafter communicated with the sheriff who took the boy’s body to Aberdeen where it was afterwards identified as that of Johnny Morrow. Meyer claimed that he had been advised by the defendant to- commit the larceny; that after the larceny was committed he was told by the defendant to hide the chickens, and that thereafter the defendant counseled Meyer to commit perjury by denying that he (Meyer) had participated in and committed the larceny and) the breaking into the chicken house for the purpose of stealing the neighbor’s chickens. Lukas having been tried and acquitted, the defendant Morrow was tried as an accessory after the fact and designated as *232 an accessoiy under section 3593 of our Code, upon which charge defendant was convicted. A motion for a new trial was made andl overruled, from which order defendant has appealed.

The record discloses that the defendant, before the arrest of John A. Meyer, told the state’s attorney that Meyer did not steal any chickens; told the officials where Meyer could be found; andl gave his version as to what had happened. If we believe Morrow’s testimony and that of his witnesses, we must conclude that the defendant did not conceal or aid Meyer that he might escape arrest, trial, and conviction on the charge upon which he was arrested. On the other hand, we have the testimony of the convicted Meyer, who upon examination previous to defendant’s trial stated both voluntarily andl under oath that he did not participate in the crime, and then, at the trial of Morrow, testified that Morrow aided him (Meyer) in concealing the evidence of the crime, and later directed Meyer’s defense. If we are to believe Meyer’s final testimony, then of course the conviction must stand, unless the errors complained of in appellant’s assignments of error are sufficient to warrant a reversal. How much credit and weight should be given to Meyer’s testimony is a very difficult problem; the state’s attorney having testified as follows: “In prosecuting Meyer I took his testimony under oath four or five times. On all those occasions except in the trial of Paul Hukas in October, Meyer insisted that he had not gone up there to steal chickens.”

It is therefore hardl to believe the testimony of a convicted felon with such a record of having evaded the issues as disclosed by the testimony given at the trial of appellant.

At the conclusion of the evidence the court instructed the jury in part as follows: “* * * The Court instructs the jury that under the law of this state one cannot 'be convicted upon the testimony of an accomplice unless such accomplice be corroborated by other evidence as herein indicated. Now the offense with which this defendant is charg-ed is not the commission of grand larceny, but is the offense of knowingly concealing or aiding Meyer, who did commit the grand larceny, with intent that by such concealing or aiding Meyer might escape from arrest, trial or conviction. Meyer testifies that in carrying out a plan designed to permit him to escape from arrest, trial or conviction, and which he says was *233 participated in by the defendant Morrow, that he — Meyer—committed perjury, which makes Meyer an accomplice of the alleged accessory — Morrow, in the ‘concealing or aiding’ which is the essence of the crime with which Morrow is charged, and therefore Morrow cannot be convicted upon the testimony of Meyer unless you find in the testimony from some source other than Meyer, evidence which tends to connect Morrow with the crime of ‘concealing or aiding’ Meyer, with knowledge of Meyer’s guilt of the larceny, with intent upon the part of Morrow that Meyer might escape arrest, trial or conviction therefore. Now it is not required! that this corroborating testimony should be sufficient in itself to establish all of the elements of the crime with which Morrow is charged. The corroboration is not sufficient if it merely shows that commission of the grand larceny or the circumstances thereof, or the commission of perjury by Meyer, but the corroborating testimony is sufficient if it fairly tends to connect the defendant Morrow with the commission of the crime of ‘concealing or aiding.’ It is not necessary that such corroborating testimony shall in itself prove or establish the defendant’s connection with the commission of the alleged offense, but only that it shall so tend. * * *”

The instruction given by the court as indicated above fairly reflects the law concerning the necessity of corroborating testimony of an accomplice. Section 4882 of the 1919 South Dakota Revised Code is as follows: “Accomplice. A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense, and the corroboration is. not sufficient if it merely shows the commission of the offense, or the circumstances thereof.”

It has been repeatedly held, by many courts, that there must be corroboration of the testimony of an accomplice.

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Related

State v. Pauley
230 N.W. 555 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
State v. Winters
228 N.W. 286 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1929)
Yeargain v. State
1935 OK CR 61 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1935)
Higgins v. State
206 S.W. 440 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 154, 64 S.D. 230, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morrow-sd-1936.