State v. Pino

158 P. 131, 21 N.M. 660
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1916
DocketNo. 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 158 P. 131 (State v. Pino) 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. Pino, 158 P. 131, 21 N.M. 660 (N.M. 1916).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

ROBERTS, C. J.

In April, 1915, the appellant was tried and convicted by a jury in the district court of Socorro county of the larceny of two head of neat cattle, the property of Ricardo Ortega, and was duly sentenced to serve' a term in the state penitentiary, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The facts disclosed by the evidence introduced on behalf of the state may be briefly summarized as follows: In the latter part of August or the first of September, 1914, the prosecuting witness, Ricardo Ortega, discovered that two cows belonging to him were missing from their accustomed range. About the 3d or 4th of September, a gentleman, named Yohs, living in Bernalillo, in Sandoval county, who was a stock buyer, wrote Ortega and three or four other stockmen in the same vicinity of Socorro county, asking them to come to Bernalillo for the purpose of identifying cattle bearing their brands. The letter was written under the following circumstances: On the 3d or 4th of September the appellant, going under an assumed name, in company with two other men, drove into the town of Bernalillo 32 head of cattle bearing various brands; .and offered to sell them to Mr. Yohs. He observed, however, that several different brands were represented in the herd, and told appellant that he would purchase them at the agreed price of $800, but that it would be necessary for appellant to meet him in Albuquerque later in the day, where he would pay him after arrangements had been made at the bank for the money. Mr. Vohs went to Albuquerque and visited the cattle sanitary board’s office and compared a memorandum which he had made of the brands upon the cattle with the official record, and ascertained the names of the owners of these brands. Thereafter he found appellant and called his attention to the fact that there were several different brands represented in the herd, and asked him .to produce a bill of sale for these cattle before payment was made. Later appellant returnéd to Bernalillo and demanded payment without producing the bills of sale, and finally asked for an advancement of $2'5 on the cattle. Mr. Vohs refused to pay him anything, and immediately wrote to all the owners of the brands, asking them to come to Bernalillo and inspect the cattle. In a day or two the several owners appeared in Bernalillo^ and claimed their respective cattle, and drove them home. Practically all the cattle in the herd were shown by 'the evidence to have been ranging in the same vicinity in Socorro county, and, while there was no direct evidence of the fact, the circumstances tend to show that all the cattle were stolen at one time, and that the theft of the entire herd of 32 was but one transaction.

[1] Appellant has assigned some 28 grounds of^error. These assignments may be divided, for the purpose of discussion, into three groups. Assignments Nos. 1 to 6, inclusive, 17 to 24, inclusive, and 28 challenge the correctness of the rulings of the trial court in permitting certain evidence to be introduced by the state in its case in chief. No one of the questions attempted to be raised by any of these assignments is set out in the motion for a new trial. Hence under a well-established rule of -this court these questions cannot be considered here. In the case of United States v. Cook, 15 N. M. 124, 103 Pac. 305, Mr. Chief Justice Mills, of the Territorial Supreme Court, stated the rule.in this regard as follows:

“The court has often held that no alleged errors, unless they are jurisdictional, will be considered, except those which ' are set out in the motion for a new trial.”

This was but a restatement of the rule laid down in former decisions of the territorial Supreme Court, and has been unformly adhered to by the territorial and state Supreme Court. See Bank of Commerce v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 19 N. M. 211, 142 Pac. 156, L. R. A. 1915A, 120; James v. Hood, 19 N. M. 234, 142 Pac. 162; State v. Ellison, 19 N. M. 428, 144 Pac. 10; State v. Holloway, 19 N. M. 528, 146 Pac. 1066, L. R. A. 1915F, 922.

It is contended by appellant that these alleged errors were saved to him by reason of a specification contained in his motion for a new trial as follows:

“The court erred in admitting incompetent and irrelevant testimony on the part of the state, over objection.”

This was clearly insufficient, however, to call the court’s attention to the alleged error. In 2 Thompson on Trials, § 2756, it is said, in speaking of a motion for a new trial:

“Where the motion is made on the ground that errors were committed by the court in admitting improper evidence, or in excluding proper evidence, it must clearly designate or specify with reasonable certainty, such evidence. * * * * Assignments ‘that the court erred, in admitting and excluding evidence,’ or that the ‘court erred in excluding material and competent evidence offered by defendant,' or that ‘the court erred in refusing to admit legal testimony offered by plaintiff,’ point to nothing, and are too indefinite.”

Wade’s New Mexico Appellate Procedure, § 114, states the rule as follows:

“Where a party complains of an erroneous decision of the court trying the cause, either in the exclusion or admission of evidence, he must point out in his motion for new trial, th reasonable certainty, the particular evidence adimtted or excluded; otherwise the Supreme Court will not consider the error on appeal or error.”

[2] Assignments of errors Nos. 7 to 17 challenge the action of the trial court in permitting the state, over objection, to prove the ownership and larceny of the other . cattle, composing the herd, which appellant drove into Bernalillo; it being his contention that such evidence was offered solely for the purpose of proving that he had committed other crimes, and that such evidence was highly prejudicial to him. It is undeniably true, and the rule is elementary, 'that it is improper on the trial of a defendant for a crime to prove that he has committed other crimes having.no connection with the one under investigation. Jones on Evidence, par. 143. But the proof received in this connection does not fall within this rule; for, as heretofore stated, the facts and circumstances in evidence tend to show that the larceny of the 32 head of cattle was but one single transaction, or at least justifies such inference. The cattle were all ranging in the same locality in Socorro county, were all jaded and tired when driven into ‘Bernalillo, and it was about a four days’ drive with cattle from the place where stolen to Bernalillo, and many of the cattle had been seen by the owners five or six days before they were found in Bernalillo. The proof was very material for the state, because it tended to establish guilt,, in so far as the two head of cattle were concerned, for.' the larceny of which appellant was being tried. In the case of Webb v. State, 8 Tex. App. 115, the court said:

“The rule where one accused of crime is found in possession of the fruits of the crime, as evidence conducing to establish his guilt, seems to be as follows: The force and value of such testimony will depend on several considerations. If the fact of possession stands alone, wholly unconnected with any other circumstances, its value or persuasive power, it is said, is very slight, and, agreeably to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
158 P. 131, 21 N.M. 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pino-nm-1916.