State v. Scott

173 N.W.2d 287, 84 S.D. 511, 1969 S.D. LEXIS 137
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1969
DocketFile 10579, 10580
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 173 N.W.2d 287 (State v. Scott) 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. Scott, 173 N.W.2d 287, 84 S.D. 511, 1969 S.D. LEXIS 137 (S.D. 1969).

Opinions

BIEGELMEIER, Presiding Judge.

Defendants appeal from their Judgments and Sentences entered on jury verdicts of guilty of grand larceny and third degree burglary.

About 2:45 on the morning of October 20, 1967 the manager of the Farmers Union Oil Company of Fedora was awakened by a buzzer in his home which was activated by an apparatus on the inside doors of the service station. He immediately called the Miner County Sheriff, dressed and stepped outside of his house to observe and investigate the cause. He observed two men coming from his station and walking on Highway 34 in his direction toward Main Street about a block away. The men turned to the right away from him when they reached Main Street, walked down the sidewalk and entered the Fox Hardware Store; sometime later he saw them come out of the store and cross the street toward the Green Oil Station.

The sheriff arrived within 15 minutes, picked up the manager and they drove into an alley behind Green Oil. While this sheriff and the deputy were coming to Fedora arrangements were made by shortwave radio to call officers from other communities • to converge at and take up stations around Fedora. There were several officers in four radio cars. Except for a large truck, they observed no traffic on the highways in the vicinity of Fedora at that time of night. Fedora is an unincorporated settlement of about 100 persons.

[513]*513After he had the area secured by checking and stationing the other officers, the sheriff started a search. About a mile away, but in the same section as Green Oil and as he approached Highway 34 from the south, he saw a car back out of a driveway of a field. He observed its red taillights as it did so and then its headlights were turned on and the car drove across Highway 34 and continued on north at a high rate of speed ahead of the sheriff. The sheriff followed this car some distance and stopped the car and, after a rather cursory search and some conversation, suggested that they follow him back into Fedora but did not arrest them. Some further conversation took place there and, after a short time, the officers advised these men they were not being held and they drove away.

The investigation continued, however, and the sheriff with the other officers by the aid of their car lights and spotlights went over the highway and adjacent area again. Within forty-five minutes the officers reached the spot where they had seen the car back out of the driveway. They found three cotton gloves and $55.12 in coins scattered on the ground. Some of the coins were odd or unusually marked and were identified as having been left in the safe in the Peterson Elevator the evening before which the officers later learned had been broken into. A rough sketch in evidence showed this area to the east of Green Oil was an alfalfa field and then pasture land. A person continuing east from Green Oil would be met with at least three north and south barbwire fences — one on the west and a second on the east of a pasture with a third beyond that along the section line. Access through this fence was the driveway on the west side where the coins were found. The only access to the center pasture field was a driveway in the southeast corner onto 34.

The investigation continued into the daylight hours when a wrecking bar, identified as taken from the Peterson Elevator, was found in grass next to the alfalfa field behind (and to the east of) Green Oil. In the same general area and on to the east in the alfalfa field a double-pronged pry bar, a machinist's hammer or bar, a jimmy bar, a long pry bar and two 17-inch screwdrivers were found. Beyond the east fence of this field, which [514]*514is the west fence of the pasture, there were two sets of car tracks, one set led directly from the south gate northwest to an area east of Green Oil; the other set indicated the car, on its return, had first driven into the pasture east fence, backed up and then went out the driveway at the southeast corner of the pasture onto 34. This was not far from the other driveway around the section line corner where the car in which defendants were stopped and the coins were found. When the car ran into the pasture fence paint samples were left on it. They were sent to the F.B.I. Laboratory together with samples of paint taken from defendants' car for analysis. Expert evidence by a physicist was to the effect that in chemical, pigment and physical appearance they were similar.

Defendants made a motion for a directed verdict which the court denied and assigns the ruling as error. Upon appeal the correctness of the motion may be reviewed and the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict is thus presented. State v. Nelson, 80 S.D. 574, 129 N.W.2d 54.

I.

In State v. Bates, 76 S.D. 23, 71 N.W.2d 641, the court considered the effect and construction of the present statute (then SDC 34.3650, now numbered SDCL 1967, § 23-45-5) authorizing the court in a criminal action to "direct the jury to return a verdict of acquittal" instead of the former statute (§ 4894, Rev.Code 1919) providing for the advising of a verdict of acquittal, (emphasis supplied) The court wrote:

"However, it is our view that the rule announced by this court under the former statute as to when a verdict should or should not be advised, applies under the present statute when the motion for a directed verdict of acquittal is predicated on the insufficiency of the evidence. State v. Halladay, 68 S.D. 547, 5 N.W.2d 42."

The reasons stated in defendants' motion were the State failed to sustain its burden proving its case; failed to prove or elicit [515]*515any facts to prove defendants guilty; the State elicited only circumstantial evidence so weak it failed to prove defendants guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, excluding all other reasonable hypotheses. This falls short of compliance with our law. Accepting the State v. Bates decision that while SDC 34.3650 (now SDCL 1967, 23-45-5) did not specify the conditions governing the exercise of the court's authority to direct a verdict, the rule applying to its predecessor Section 4894, R.C. 1919 governs, we examine cases decided under it. State v. Kirby, 34 S.D. 281, 148 N.W. 533, and State v. Jerke, 1949, 73 S.D. 64, 38 N.W.2d 874, held sufficiency of the evidence could not be reviewed under such a motion when no "grounds were specified wherein there had been a failure of proof" or "did not particularize the claimed deficiency or failure of proof". The motion may not be a general statement of failure of proof but must point out wherein the proof fails. This is only stating in another way the requirement of other statutes and rules applicable. SDCL 1967, § 23-1-3 makes all the provisions of Titles 15, 16, 19, 21 and 30 (being the Rules of Civil Procedure) applicable to criminal procedure except in certain instances not here pertinent. Under Supreme Court Rules 143, 144 and 145 of 1939 (S.D.C.

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State v. Scott
173 N.W.2d 287 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 N.W.2d 287, 84 S.D. 511, 1969 S.D. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-scott-sd-1969.