State v. Till

299 N.W. 454, 68 S.D. 160, 1941 S.D. LEXIS 49
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1941
DocketFile No. 8400.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 299 N.W. 454 (State v. Till) 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. Till, 299 N.W. 454, 68 S.D. 160, 1941 S.D. LEXIS 49 (S.D. 1941).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

The defendants, August Till and John Till, brothers, were charged with committing the crime of grand larceny on or about the 18th of October, 1938, in Harding County, South Dakota, of one unbranded cow, a yearling heifer, and a heifer calf, the property of one John Mathys. They were tried in the circuit court and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. After the various formalities in the lower court defendants perfected ah appeal to this court.

Appellants by their appeal question the. sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction of the crime of grand larceny; that the evidence is circumstantial and supports the *162 inference of innocence as strongly as it does the inference of guilt. Other questions raised which we feel must work to the advantage of the appellants and a reversal of the judgment will be found later in this opinion. We gather from the record that the owner of the cattle had not branded any of his livestock, while the cattle he identified on the defendants’ premises in company with the Sheriff who had obtained notice by a letter from the Sheriff of Perkins County were branded. What bearing the evidence as to branding has upon the guilt of these defendants is a question not so easily solved. We first examine the evidence concerning the possession of the three head of cattle. It would seem that there is some evidence that the owner’s enclosure had been tampered with. The fence wires were twisted together and there were horse and cattle hoof prints upon the ground outside the fence. There is some evidence that the defendant August Till traveled upon the highway by automobile at and near the Mathys’ place, and that he called on some of his neighbors living nearby for the purpose of purchasing cattle about the time Mathys discovered the absence of a cow and two heifers. Next we find some evidence showing that certain estrays were upon the defendants’ premises not far from the ranch buildings. The location of the cattle upon defendants’ premises is a distance of about 20 miles from the owner’s enclosure where the State contends that the cattle were stolen. The State’s evidence as to the length of time consumed by the estrays going from the owner’s premises to the defendants’ premises is very indefinite. The asportation by the defendants, one of the elements composing the crime of grand larceny, seems entirely absent.

Sometime in the fore part of November, 1938, the defendant, John Till, called and reported to the Sheriff of Perkins County that there were three estrays upon his premises and the evidence shows that the estrays were out in the open and not hidden from the view of the public. Sometime later in April, 1939, the other defendant, upon his return from the West where he had worked during the winter and spring shearing sheep, called on the Sheriff of Perkins *163 County stating that the estrays were still there. Later on the Sheriff of Perkins County wrote to the Sheriff of Harding County that certain estrays or cattle were on the premises of the defendants. Thereafter the owner of the cattle and the Sheriff of Harding County called for the cattle. The defendant August Till rounded up the three cattle and also two calves that had been dropped that spring and turned them over to the owner. Sometime thereafter the State informed against the defendants and they were arrested for the crime of grand larceny. We believe that the evidence as disclosed by the record fully explains the possession of the animals by the defendants. If this conviction is to be sustained upon the record as made, persons caring for estrays may find themselves in a rather peculiar dilemma and may be made innocent victims through no fault of their own. We are not persuaded that the evidence in this case amounts to unexplained possession, but on the contrary we feel that the possession is fully explained by the accused.

In 2 Wharton’s Criminal Law 1463 § 1144, we find the following language: “Evidence of a bona fide attempt to discover the owner may destroy the presumption of fraudulent intent. Thus where a shawl, dropped in an exhibition room, was picked up by the defendant, placed in a conspicuous situation, and afterward, not being claimed, was appropriated to his own use, it was held no larceny. So the conscientious belief of an ignorant person that a note found by him was by law his own may be received to disprove felonious intent.”

At this point we are confronted with certain brands that had been placed upon the three head of cattle. Certain marks and a cutting of the ears and burned brands in the form of letters on the hip. Just what bearing this branding may establish as an element of the crime of grand larceny we feel is rather obscure for the reason that the defendants have denied placing any brands or marks upon the cattle and the State has not produced any evidence whatsoever that the brands and marks were placed upon the animals by the defendants. The State, however, would have us believe *164 that the finding of certain branding irons upon the premises of the defendants establishes the inference that the defendants placed the marks and brands on them. Just why the defendants would place a “B” brand upon the estrays is inconceivable to us as it is opposed to their actions in disclosing the possession upon their premises to the peace officer. In examining the evidence given by Sheriff Blackburn we find that the defendant Gus reported to him that the estrays were still there in April and that he told the Sheriff that there was a “B” brand on them. The Sheriff testified that after this last talk he wrote to Sheriff Rickey. From the evidence in the record as to this branding and marking upon the estrays it would seem that very little importance can be attached to it as an inference of guilt and in fact it indicates innocence.

There is no evidence as to what may have taken place between the indefinite time that the cattle left the owner’s premises and when they were first seen upon the defendants’ premises and it would therefore be mere speculation to attempt to determine what may have happened in the interim but it is not beyond a possibility that others than the accused may have performed the branding and marking operations. This we sáy upon the theory that if the defendants were concerned with the branding and marking of the three head of cattle, it does not seem at all likely that they would advise the sheriff two different times that they had certain estrays upon their premises.

We cannot find and we do not know of any authority requiring the defendants to explain when the branding and markings upon the animals took place. The defendants have denied the branding and marking and as the record now stands we do not believe that the fact that the owner found them with brands and marks that it is an indication of guilt. The evidence is entirely circumstantial and it would seem that we would not be doing our full duty if we were to sustain this conviction upon such weak circumstantial evidence.

In State v. Kenstler et al., 59 S. D. 441, 240 N. W. 489, this court said: “The jury might disbelieve all these wit *165 nesses for the defense. But a disbelief of the evidence for the defense does not permit the jury to act upon a belief to the contrary when there is insufficient evidence to support such belief.”

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Related

State v. Flake
165 N.W.2d 55 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. Nelson
165 N.W.2d 55 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
299 N.W. 454, 68 S.D. 160, 1941 S.D. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-till-sd-1941.