State v. Watkins

481 P.2d 689, 156 Mont. 456, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 478
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1971
Docket11824
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 481 P.2d 689 (State v. Watkins) 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. Watkins, 481 P.2d 689, 156 Mont. 456, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 478 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction on five counts of receiving stolen property entered on a verdict of guilty by a jury after trial in the district court of the Fourteenth Judicial District, Musselshell County.

Defendant Watkins was initially charged with six counts of receiving stolen property, the same being horses, however count #6 was dismissed during trial.

• • Don Keith resides at Corcoran, California and raises show and racing quarter horses for sale there and at his leased operation 13 or 14- miles distant at Tulare, California. Count *458 one, two and three allege the receiving of stolen horses named Bar Lay, Kaweah Cholla and Sancy Bar by defendant on or about October 31, 1968, all the property of Don Keith. Count 5 alleged the receiving by defendant of a colt named Saucy Bar Moon on or about November 13, 1968, also the property of Don Keith.

Count 4 alleges the receiving of a horse named Royal Dalton on or about October 31, 1968 by defendant; this horse being the property of one L. L. Tuck who breeds and raises quarter horses at Littleton, Colorado. These horses were alleged to have been stolen from California and Colorado and received by defendant at his ranch near Roundup, Montana.

The state’s witnesses testified the horses Bar Lay, Kaweah Cholla, Saucy Bar and Saucy Bar Moon were the property of Don Keith and Saucy Bar Moon was the colt of Saucy Bar and these horses were stolen on the night of October 11, 1968 or the early morning of October 12, 1968. There was no evidence of the identity of the thief or thieves.

Ed Reeves, a painter employed by Keith, testified he saw the defendant at the Don Keith ranch in California where the horses were, in the late afternoon of October 11, 1968. Defendant testified he was not there at that time and produced several witnesses who testified defendant was in the vicinity of Roundup, Montana the following afternoon of October 12, 1968. A witness testified he had telephone conversations with defendant on October 12, 1968 from Roundup and had seen defendant personally on October 13, 1968.

Witnesses established the presence of these horses on defendent’s ranch at Roundup, Montana on October 31, 1968.

Tuck and one of his employees testified defendant was on the Tuck ranch in Colorado on October 25, 1968; that defendant was accompanied by a Robert Miller who was a close associate of defendant and also operates a ranch in the Roundup area. Miller, having access to defendant’s property, brought numerous horses there and held sales during the *459 spring and summer of 1968. Royal Dalton was missing and reported stolen in Colorado October 29, 1968. Royal Dalton was also identified on defendant’s ranch at Roundup on October 31, 1968. Defendant did not deny being in Colorado on October 25, 1968 and further testified he had seen all of these horses on his property or horses similar to them and assumed they came from Bob Miller’s ranch.

The only horse claimed by defendant was the colt identified as Saucy Bar Moon. Defendant maintains that this colt was given to him by Robert Miller for stud fees.

There is a conflict in the testimony which could only be explained by a mistake in identification of the colt inasmuch as defendant claims he received the colt from Miller in August or September, 1968 and if it was in fact Saucy Bar Moon it was not taken from California until October 1968. In any case he denied any knowledge of these horses other than his belief they were Miller’s and his source of title to the colt was from Miller.

The defendant presents six specifications of error for consideration by this Court. The first three can be treated together as they concern the element of proof to establish the crime of receiving stolen property. The defendant contends the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the property was stolen by someone other than the defendant. He also contends that the presumption contained in section 94-2704.1, R.C.M.1947, which provides:

“Possession of stolen livestock as evidence of larceny. The possession, claim of ownership or control over recently stolen livestock shall be deemed prima facie evidence of guilt of larceny of that livestock unless this presumption is rebutted or contradicted by other credible evidence.”

was not overcome by the State and hence the evidence invokes the statutory presumption, supra, that the defendant is guilty of the theft of the animals which bars the conviction under the receiving stolen property statute.

*460 The defendant relies on State v. Gilbert, 126 Mont. 171, at page 174, 246 P.2d 814, at page 816 (1952) as principal authority to establish his position that the State must prove theft by someone other than defendant by the following language of the Montana Supreme Court:

“A necessary and essential element of the crime of receiving stolen property is that of establishing beyond a' reasonable doubt that the stolen property be stolen by someone other than the defendant.”

The Montana legislature imposed no such burden on the State in section 94-2721, E.C.M.1947, which defind the crime as follows:

“Receiver of stolen property. Every person who for his own gain or to prevent the owner from again possessing his own property buys or receives any personal property, knowing the same to have been stolen, is punishable- by imprisonment in the state prison not exceeding five (5) years or in a county jail not exceeding six (6) months; and it is presumptive evidence that such property was stolen if the same consists of jewelry, silver or plated ware or articles of personal ornaments, brass, bronze or copper fixtures, fittings or parts of machinery, or electrical supplies, or what is commonly termed junk, if purchased or received from a person under the age of twenty-one (21) years unless said property is sold by said minor at a fixed place of business carried on by said minor or his employer.”

Additionally, the case law until Gilbert in 1952 imposed no such burden, see State v. Moxley, 41 Mont. 402, 110 P. 83 (1910); State v. Sim, 92 Mont. 541, 16 P.2d 411 (1932); State v. Keays, 97 Mont. 404, 34 P.2d 855 (1934).

As a practical matter the Gilbert rule seems to be an expression of the Court’s concern that the defendant be protected from.the possibility of being charged for both crimes arising out .of a single theft and created a burden on the State- that rendered the receiving statute almost nugatory.

*461 The Court in 1965 in State v. Peters, 146 Mont. 188, 405 P.2d 642, while examining the sufficiency of the information and proof required at trial, by implication overruled Gilbert and reinstated the rule before

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
481 P.2d 689, 156 Mont. 456, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-watkins-mont-1971.