State v. Randolph

192 Iowa 636
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 22, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 Iowa 636 (State v. Randolph) 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. Randolph, 192 Iowa 636 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

Preston, J.

i evidfnob-' (oundation f¿r introduction. It is shown without any substantial dispute in the evidence that defendant was in possession of the car, and that the numbers were changed, as charged. Indeed; counsel for appellant state in argument that, for the purPoses this appeal, they do not contend that the jury was not justified in finding that the numbers were changed. We do not understand counsel to contend that defendant was not in possession; and there is no claim, as we understand it, that she had in her possession a certificate of registration and transfer- from the proper officers, showing reasons why the numbers were defaced, etc. Defendant’s counsel do contend, and such are the three errors assigned -. First, that a certain letter, which the State alleges was written by the defendant, was erroneously admitted in evidence, without sufficient identification or foundation to show that it was a letter written by the defendant; second, that the court erred in per[638]*638mitting the State to show that one Jim Sally, alias A. C. Collins, who, with this defendant, was charged with the offense of larceny of a Ford automobile, the numbers of which had been tampered with, had pleaded guilty to such charge; and third, that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding that defendant knew that the numbers on the Buick had been changed.

As to this last proposition, we may remark, in passing, that the instructions given by the trial court ai’e not before us, so that we do not know whether the court instructed the jury that it was or was not necessary to show such knowledge. The statute does not seem to require it. It is contended by the State that it is not a necessary element to be negatived by the State. In the absence of the instructions, and for the further reason that we think that, under the evidence, the possession of defendant of such a car, so mutilated, was not innocent, and that the jury could have found that she did have knowledge, we deem it unnecessary to pass upon the question of law as to whether it is necessary to show knowledge.

1. The letter was admitted in evidence near the close of the State’s evidence. At the close of all the evidence, defendant moved the court to strike the letter from the record and withdraw it from the jury, which motion was overruled. Mr. McKee, the sheriff, testified that he had seen the handwriting of defendant, and was acquainted with it to some extent; that the writing in the letter looked like the handwriting of defendant. But he afterwards testified that he had none of the defendant’s handwriting in his possession; that he never saw her write anything ; that he did not see her write the poem on the wall of the jail; that he saw some letters with the address on the envelope; that he never compared any of the envelopes with the writing on the wall. The defense contends that the mental comparison, as they put it, by the sheriff, of the writing in the letter with the writing on the jail wall, together with his evidence, was not sufficient to admit the letter in evidence.

The claim is that the letter in question was written while defendant was in jail at Atlantic, in Cass County, early in September. It is dated September 7, 1920. She was confined in the jail at Atlantic from September 3d to the 11th. So far, the [639]*639foundation or identification was, perhaps, not sufficient. But there are other circumstances shown, and the letter itself bears internal evidence of having been written by the defendant. It appears that someone had written a poem on the steel wall of the jail, with a lead pencil, while defendant was confined in the jail. Other people had been in the jail before defendant, but the sheriff says that the writing on the wall was not there then. The sanie poem was written in the letter. The letter is addressed to William Randolph, and is signed at the end, “Your wife.” In the middle of the letter, when the party writing it evidently had stopped, and added more, it reads, “I remain, your wife, Alice By. ’ ’ She testifies as a witness on the stand that William Randolph is her husband. The letter refers to the separation of plaintiff and her husband, and refers to his having sent her away; She testifies as a witness that, after she got her husband out of jail at Carroll, he deserted her, and she felt hurt about it. In another place, she refers to the Carroll high ball, and says that she was not feeling well since then. The letter warns Randolph to be careful; that the Carroll sheriff is on the lookout for him; and again, ‘ ‘ Once you get started, keep going, they are hip tp the Carroll doings' and Waterloo, so you see that makes it harder on me.” Again, “They found a file and one of your old bugs in the Buioh.” Again: “I look for another pinch from Winterset, as they have the Buioh there, and understand they have warrants from there. ’ ’

It appears that the ear was in the possession of the sheriff at Winterset at that time. Defendant had been arrested for having the car in her possession at the town of Earlham, in Madison County.

Other matters of a personal nature, such as would be likely • to pass between a husband and wife, and between this defendant and her husband, are referred to in the letter. The letter refers to matters which were known only to the defendant, and relates to subjects closely akin to the facts in this case, which facts were known only to the defendant, and which in themselves tend strongly to sIioav that the letter was either written by her or dictated by her. Another circumstance in the letter not before mentioned is that it refers to a possible arrest in Madison County, Iowa, which arrest was not made until some time later. It is [640]*640contended by the State that, even though the court erred in admitting the letter in evidence, the ruling is without prejudice, because the essential elements in the offense charged are without dispute in the evidence; and that such elements are that defendant was in possession of the car, that the numbers were changed, and that she did not have the required certificate. There is another circumstance which seems to us important, and that is the fact that the defendant was a witness in her own behalf on the trial of this case, and did not deny writing the letter; did not, in her evidence, refer to the letter at all. She knew whether she wrote it, or at least authorized it, and knew that there was evidence tending to show that she did write it, and that the State was claiming that she did. Her silence is significant. Witness Campbell, a policeman at Marshalltown, testifies that he is acquainted with William Randolph, and that he got this letter from Randolph. One of the objections urged by defendant to the letter was that it was written after the transaction at Earl-ham, September 2d. But it was soon after, and relates to matters occurring prior thereto, in the nature of an admission. Considering all the - evidence in the case, we think it was sufficient to permit the introduction of the letter in evidence as having been written by her, or perhaps dictated by her. The evidence shows that defendant’s sister was in jail while defendant was confined therein.

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Bluebook (online)
192 Iowa 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-randolph-iowa-1921.