State v. Shoars

228 N.W. 413, 59 N.D. 67, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 238
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 228 N.W. 413 (State v. Shoars) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North 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. Shoars, 228 N.W. 413, 59 N.D. 67, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 238 (N.D. 1929).

Opinions

The defendant, Tillie Shoars, was convicted in the district court of Cass county of the crime of receiving stolen property, knowing the same to be stolen, with intent to deprive the owner thereof. There was a motion for a new trial and from the order of the trial judge overruling the motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals.

In the motion for a new trial the defendant specified as error certain instructions of the trial court, but such instructions cannot be considered by this court for the reason that appellant did not file exceptions to the instructions within twenty days as provided by § 10,824, Comp. Laws 1913. The instructions in the case at bar were oral and said § 10,824 provides that:

"If the charge of the court, or any part thereof, is given orally, the same must be taken down by the official stenographer and shall be deemed excepted to by the defendant, and the same as soon as may be after the trial must be written out at length and filed with the clerk of the court by the stenographer thereof; provided, that in case the defendant is acquitted by the jury the oral instructions need not be transcribed or filed with the clerk. But exceptions in writing to any of the instructions ofthe court in any manner given, or the refusal of the court togive instructions requested, may be filed by the defendant *Page 69 at his discretion, with the clerk of the court within twenty daysafter the instructions are all filed as herein provided."

Under § 10,825, Comp. Laws 1913:

"The court may, in its discretion, submit the written instructions which it proposes to give to the jury, to the counsel in the case for examination, and require such counsel after a reasonable examination thereof, to designate such parts thereof as he may deem objectionable, and such counsel must thereupon designate such parts of such instructions as he may deem improper, and thereafter only such parts of said written instructions so designated shall be deemed excepted to, or subject to exception."

It is clear from these sections that it is the intent of the law that all objections to the instructions to the jury by the trial court in a criminal case must be preserved by exceptions or they are waived. If the instructions are written and the trial judge submits them to counsel with a reasonable time for examination, and counsel does not except to the instructions or any part thereof, all objections are waived. If the trial judge does not submit the instructions to the counsel, exceptions may be filed any time within twenty days from the filing of the instructions in the office of the clerk of the district court.

In the case of State v. Reilly, 25 N.D. 342, 141 N.W. 720, this court said: "Exceptions to an oral charge are required to be filed within twenty days and unless so filed the right thereto will be waived."

It is appellant's contention that the verdict was contrary to law and clearly against the evidence in the case, in that it did not show guilt or knowledge on the part of the defendant, nor did it show or prove any intent on her part to deprive the owner thereof as to the property alleged to have been received by her, nor did it identify the property alleged to have been stolen as the property and the same property that it was alleged the defendant received into her possession as such stolen property.

We have carefully examined the record and it is clearly proven that the home of Mrs. J.W. Smith, on North Broadway, Fargo, North Dakota, was burglarized on the night of the 27th of December, or the morning of the 28th, 1928, and that there were taken from the place a large coffee urn, a silver tray, a musical dish, and four books of *Page 70 phonograph records, and a phonograph, the records being Victor, Columbia and Brunswick records. The phonograph had been taken apart and there were chips of wood and pieces of machinery and smaller parts lying on the floor. The house had been thoroughly ransacked. On the evening of the 27th, the defendant stated to the witness, Mrs. Custard, that she was going to Bemidji. Mrs. Custard packed her grip for her and the defendant left and was not at her home in Fargo after seven o'clock until five o'clock in the morning of the 28th. Mrs. Custard says that she got up at five o'clock to get breakfast for one of the boarders and she heard someone rattle the door which she opened and the defendant was standing there and she came into the house carrying some records and a package on top of the records. "She says, `take this,' and I says, `throw it on the table,' and she just pushed it over on the table like that (indicating), and she went in the front room, and she came back, and I says to her, `what is that,' and she picked it up and she shoved it in the cook stove then, and she says, `could that be melted,' and I says what is it, and she says, `well, that' . . . I says, `I don't know, what is it,' well, she says, `look and see,' and when I opened it to see what it was, and I says, `you can't get a fire hot enough to melt that.'" . . . "When she pulled it out of the oven, and laid it on top of the cook stove, I seen what was in it."

Q. How did you see what was in it?

A. We opened it, she and I.

Q. What did you see?

A. It was silver. All I know, she said it was silver. . . . There was a silver plate about that long (indicating).

Q. About fourteen inches, or twelve inches?

A. I don't think over that; it might have been shorter; I couldn't say. . . . There was several other pieces there. . . .

"I just asked her where she got them and she said that it was none of my business." There was no one else present at the time. . . . "I cleaned out the wood box of the wood and the paper and she put it down in the bottom of the wood box." I saw the records there. "I was sitting on the day bed and she was sitting in the rocker calling off the names, and I noticed some of them were Brunswick records, and *Page 71 Victor records." On cross-examination she said some were Brunswick records, some Victor and I think some Columbia records.

Q. Describe if you will, Mrs. Custard, how large a package it was that contained this silver?

A. Well, I would judge it was about that long, and O, probably that big (indicating) around — might not have been quite that, but there was a lot of paper around it too, but it might have been that big around (indicating); might have been a trifle larger.

This, of course, does not show intelligently to the court the size, but she indicated with her hands or arms apparently the size of the package of silver in the presence of the jury and it was intelligible to it. Mrs. Custard, further testifying, states:

"Q. Describe the contents of the package, the number of pieces and the shapes and form?

A. Just the tray was all, and there was several pieces, long pieces, but I never counted them, because when I said to her to dump them in the wood box there, I says "get them out of sight, before anybody sees them, and get them out of here before I go, because I won't stay here if they are here."

. . .

"Friday afternoon she (meaning the defendant) said to Harry and the two youngest Jones boys, Chubby and Buddy; `you take this out and dump it, and be sure you put the garbage on that package.'"

Q. That was the same package. A. Yes, sir.
Q. Still bundled up in the paper? A. Yes, sir.
Q. And it went out that way? A. Yes, sir.
Q. And you saw it go? A. Yes, sir.

Q.

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264 N.W. 532 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)
State v. Youman
263 N.W. 477 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)
State v. Bossart
240 N.W. 606 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1932)
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240 N.W. 604 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 N.W. 413, 59 N.D. 67, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shoars-nd-1929.