State v. Russell

18 P.2d 611, 93 Mont. 334, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 4
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1933
DocketNo. 7,077.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 611 (State v. Russell) 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. Russell, 18 P.2d 611, 93 Mont. 334, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 4 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

ME. JUSTICE STEWAET

delivered the opinion of the court.

An information charging grand larceny was filed in the district court of Toole county against Howard Eussell, Sherman Baxter, and Orville Page. Eussell and Baxter were tried together and a jury found them guilty and fixed their punishment at one year each in the state prison.

The defendants were charged with larceny of certain automobile tires and accessories of the alleged value of $200, the property of J. L. Stein.

Eussell and Baxter have appealed from the judgment and from the court’s order overruling their motion for a new trial. The appeal was presented upon several specifications of error, but the case may well be considered under two general headings: (a) Eulings upon the admission of specific evidence; and (b) was the evidence as a whole sufficient to support a conviction?

The owner of the property testified to having left his car, with the accessories in question, at a point near his home in Shelby on the evening before the alleged larceny, and of having observed the absence of the accessories the next morning. He told of going to Great Falls a day or two later, and of seeing the accessories there in the possession of officers who had taken them from the defendants. He testified positively that he recognized the property and that it was owned *336 by Mm. Objection was made that his identification was not based upon marks or brands but was general. The witness maintained that he did not have to rely upon brands or marks, but that he had seen the property every day for two years and knew that it was his.

The evidence was clearly admissible and, the jury having believed it, the defendants cannot complain. Similar testimony was approved by the supreme court of Washington, in the case of State v. Taylor, 159 Wash. 614, 294 Pac. 260, 261; the court saying: “It is first contended in this connection that there is not sufficient evidence to support the finding that the wire found in the possession of the appellant, in the city of Seattle was the wire stolen from the telephone company at Marysville. It is true that the witnesses testifying on this point could not identify the wire by any specific marks upon it. The most they could say was that the wire found in the appellant’s possession and the wire stolen were of the same character, were of the same gauge, and were the same in quantity. It would seem that had the evidence shown nothing more than this, it would still have been a question for the jury.” In the early California case of People v. Keane, 43 Cal. 638, the court approved similar testimony.

It is also urged that it was error to allow Stein, the owner of the property to testify as to its value. It is a well-established rule that the owner of personal property who is familiar with its original cost and use is qualified to testify regarding its value, independently of knowledge of recent sales of similar second-hand property. (People v. Haney, (Cal. App.) 14 Pac. (2d) 854.) There was other competent evidence as to value in the record, so that point was covered aside from the testimony of the owner.

Witnesses J. L. Thor and Howard Ramsey were allowed to testify, over objection of defendants, that on the same night that the Stein property was taken similar accessories were taken from their cars as they stood parked in the town of Shelby. These parts were located in the possession of the defendants in Great Falls on the morning of the 19th of July, *337 in the same car with the Stein property. This testimony was intended to show a system of stealing by these defendants and was admissible for that purpose.

This court, in State v. Hill, 46 Mont. 24, 126 Pac. 41, 43, said: “Evidence of other similar crimes, committed at about the same time, if calculated to identify the perpetrator of the particular crime charged, or to show the intent with which an alleged criminal act was committed, or that it was part of a system or chain of similar crimes, is admissible.” (State v. Hall, 45 Mont. 498, 125 Pac. 639; Myers v. People, 65 Colo. 450, 177 Pac. 145; Oldham v. State, 42 Okl. Cr. 209, 275 Pac. 383; State v. Morris, 90 Or. 60, 175 Pac. 668.)

This testimony was admissible under the ruling in the recent case of State v. McCracken, ante, p. 269, 18 Pac. (2d) 302, in which case this court approved the admission of testimony as to the driving away of horses other than the subject of the alleged larceny and owned by other parties; all of the horses being driven away together by the defendant and his employees or agents. In that case the court said: “At any rate, the testimony was admissible as a part of the res gestae.” (Citing State v. Broadwater, 75 Mont. 350, 243 Pac. 587.)

No error was committed in the admission of the particular items of testimony heretofore discussed, but the defendants urge that the evidence as a whole was insufficient to sustain a conviction and that their motion for a verdict of acquittal should have been sustained. We do not agree with this contention. The property being identified, the. value being established, and the unlawful removal proven, these elements can be considered as settled.

The property was removed from Shelby to Great Falls between the late evening of the 18th and the morning of the 19th of July. Between the hours of 8:30 and 10:30 of the 19th, the defendants were found in possession of all of the property. at Great Falls. When the tires, tubes and other parts were first seen in their possession in the Star car used by the defendants, they were in what might be termed an “assembled condition”; that is, the wheels, rims, tubes and *338 casings were in place. The witness Ira Starr testified that he knew the defendants and lived near the “Moody place” where they were staying; that they had been around the “Moody place” near his home every day from a time a few days after the 4th of July until about the 14th or 15th of July; that he did not see them after the last-mentioned date until the morning of the 19th of July at about 10:30, when they drove into the “Moody place” with the Star coach laden with wheels, tires, rims, and so forth, in place or assembled; that soon after they arrived at the “Moody place” where defendants were staying, the Moody brothers drove up and entered into a conversation with the defendants. One of the Moody boys, while looking at the parts, said, “These would make a damn good outfit for our Ford.” One of the defendants said, “Damn if you are, we are going to sell these and get some money, we will get you some more.”

The defendants proceeded at once to disassemble the parts. They took the tires off the rims and rolled them into an outhouse where they were afterwards found. They loaded the wheels and rims in Moody’s truck and drove away with them. When they came back a short time later, they did not have them. The evidence does not disclose what defendants did with these parts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 611, 93 Mont. 334, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-russell-mont-1933.