State v. Richey

107 So. 484, 160 La. 667, 1926 La. LEXIS 1943
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketNo. 27364.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 So. 484 (State v. Richey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Richey, 107 So. 484, 160 La. 667, 1926 La. LEXIS 1943 (La. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The two defendants were convicted of knowingly receiving stolen property, and, from a sentence of a term in the penitentiary, prosecute this appeal.

The property as set out in the original indictment was simply described as Ford- automobile parts.

In response to a request for a more specific description, the property was alleged to consist of four auto car wheels, three auto tires, four tubes, two auto headlights, one car floor mat, two seat covers, one generator and one starter for Ford automobile, one automobile horn, Ford automobile coils, and one automobile battery.

When the state, on trial of the case, and after having examined the alleged owner of the property as to its identity, offered the said property in evidence, the defendants ‘objected, on the ground that the property had not been identified by the prosecuting witness or by any other witness. It was contended that the only part of the property identified was the seat covers and horn, and these were not admissible because not included in the charge.

It is stated in the bill of exception that the prosecuting witness had sworn that all of the parts described were his property and were on his Ford car when they were stolen; that the horn was formerly taken from a Hudson car, but was attached by him to his Ford car; that the seat covers were manufactured by some company other than the Ford factory, but that he had bought them with his Ford car, and he was using the horn and seat covers on his Ford car as parts of said car when it was stolen.

It is true the witness stated that, while he was certain that all of the auto parts mentioned were his and were the identical parts which were on his car, he would only swear to the horn and seat covers.

Taking the whole of the witness’ testimony together, we think the. identity of the property was sufficiently established to permit the offering of the parts for the consideration of the jury. The witness unquestionably believed that the parts were the identical parts taken from his car. The weight and effect of this testimony of identification was a matter to be left to the jury in determining the guilt or innocence of the accused.

The objection that the seat covers and the horn were not included in the indictment, because they were not products of the Ford factory, is equally without merit. The bill of particulars which was called for by defendants, and to which there was no objection, did not allege that these articles were manufactured by Ford. Having been *671 attached to the Ford car and used in operating said car, the parts were as much a part of the Ford car as if they had been specially designed for said car.

It appears that at the beginning of the trial a witness for defendant was absent, and the district attorney admitted that, if such witness was present, he would swear that on October 14, 1924, he sold to Jesse Richey two United States tires.

When it came the defendants’ time to offer evidence, their counsel offered this admission for the declared purpose of showing that, within the period between September 15, 1924, when the property is alleged to have been stolen, and November 6, 1924, when the officers found certain tires in possession of defendants, the defendant Jesse Richey was making purchases of tires in the regular course of trade. To the introduction of the admission for the purpose declared, the state objected, and this objection was sustained.

The ruling was obviously proper.

To the admission as made by the district attorney, there could have been no serious ground of objection. But the defendant could not enlarge that admission so as to embrace facts which were clearly not included in the admission. The admission of the sale of particular tires could not be extended so as to show that defendants were general dealers in, and frequent purchasers of, auto parts in due course of trade; but, apart from this, the tires alleged to have been sold by the witness Prank Hunter to one of the defendants was of a different make from the stolen ones.

The third and fourth bills are upon the same subject-matter, and will be considered together.

After the state had closed its evidence in chief, and the defendants had placed their last witness, Oscar Murphy, on the stand, and who had testified to the single fact that he had sold one of the defendants a Ford ear a short time before the alleged stolen auto parts had been found in defendants’ possession, the state, on cross-examination, asked the witness the following question:

“Q. Mr. Murphy, didn’t you meet Mr. D. W. Squyers, deputy sheriff, on the public road about two days before this search was made on or about November 4th, and did you not tell him then Cfat you were at Gene Richey’s house when he brought some Ford parts, including seat covers, horn, generator, and starter and wheels, and threw them into his yard, and said, ‘by G—d, that' is the, way he got his, that he didn’t have to work for them’?”

To this question the defendants objected, on the ground that thé evidence sought was not in cross-examination of any matter brought out in chief; that the state had no right under the guise of impeachment, to lay the basis to offer independent evidence, and on further ground that the evidence was hearsay and related to a conversation which took place out of the presence of the defendants.

The objections were overruled, for the reason that, in the opinion of the court, the evidence was admissible for the purpose of impeaching the witness.

It does not appear from bill 3 whether the witness admitted or denied making the statement imputed to him. We assume, however, that his answer was a denial, since from bill 4 it appears that the state was permitted to prove by the deputy sheriff that Murphy had made the statement to him that he had seen Gene Richey throw certain automobile parts into his (Richey’s) yard, accompanying the act with the exclamation already mentioned.

The ruling of the court complained of in these two bills in our opinion was erroneous and extremely prejudicial to the accused parties.

There was no direct or immediate connection between the sale oí a Ford car by Murphy to'Richey and the statement alleged to have been made by Murphy to the' deputy sheriff. The sale of the car and the state *673 ment of Murphy were separate and independent matters, remote from each other, and the question put to Murphy could not possibly form a traverse or contradiction of the fact testified to by Murphy—that is, that he had sold Richey a Ford car—nor was such statement inconsistent with the sale of the car.

The rule is well settled that the cross-examination by the state of a defendant’s witness must be c'onfined to matters brought out by the defendant in the examination in chief. State v. Allemand, 96 So. 552, 153 La. 746.

The only exception to the rule thus stated is the right to test the memory and the credibility of the witness or when the matter is a proper subject of inquiry for laying the basis for impeaching the witness. In State v. Freddy, 41 So. 436, 117 La. 128, 116 Am. St. Rep.

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State v. Johnson
193 So. 2d 794 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1967)
State v. Young
193 So. 2d 243 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1966)
State v. Watson
170 So. 2d 107 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 484, 160 La. 667, 1926 La. LEXIS 1943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-richey-la-1926.