State v. White

19 P.2d 192, 37 N.M. 121
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1933
DocketNo. 3740.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 192 (State v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. White, 19 P.2d 192, 37 N.M. 121 (N.M. 1933).

Opinion

ZINN, Justice.

On the 17th day of April, 1931, Oscar White and James Audray White were indicted by a grand jury in Chaves county, charged with the crime of larceny of a cow of the property of one R. W. Hancock, and were found guilty of such charge by a jury on the 30th day of April, 1931, and were sentenced by the trial court after such conviction. On this appeal it is urged by the appellants that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty at the conclusion of the state’s case in chief, and also at the conclusion of all the evidence, for the reason that there was not sufficient substantial evidence to support a verdict of guilty.

At the conclusion of the state’s case in chief, the defendants moved for a directed verdict, which motion was duly overruled, and the defendants introduced evidence in their behalf. By the introduction of such evidence after overruling said motion, the appellants waived the objection. State v. Analla et al., 34 N. M. 22, 276 P. 291; State v. Stewart, 34 N. M. 65, 277 P. 22.

It now becomes necessary to consider the evidence as it applies to each of the defendants, and to apply the law.

As to defendant Oscar White, the evidence discloses that he o.wned a ranch twelve miles north of Roswell known as the Ballard ranch, on the west side of the Pecos river, and he owned another ranch twenty-five miles from this ranch, known as the River ranch, on. the east side of the Pecos river. That the Ballard ranch was the headquarters ranch, but the River ranch was merely a camp which had been unoccupied for many years, and which ranch adjoined that of R. W. Hancock, the owner of the cow. That on December 13, 1930, Hancock’s son let six head into a small pasture on the River ranch, returning the next day with his father, R. W. Hancock, and his brother, and found one of these six head, a cow, butchered and hanging in an open shed at the River ranch camp with the hide rolled up and lying on the ground in the shed where the meat was hanging up, which hide Hancock later took to Roswell and'delivered the same to the officers. The evidence further discloses that Oscar White was seen with James Audray White about four miles from the river ranch, some time during the afternoon, but that they parted about 200 yards from where they were seen by the state’s witnesses, James Audray White, proceeding to the river ranch camp, while Oscar White crossed the Pecos river and went to a place known as Pony Lake where he was feeding cattle and ranging a band of sheep, which place is about nine miles from the River ranch, and then rode on to Ballard ranch, arriving there about seven o’clock that evening and stayed there all night, returning to Pony Lake the next day; that during the afternoon of that day, Sunday, James Audray White, accompanied by Mrs. Audray White and one Lucille Barker, came to Pony Lake when James Audray White informed Oscar White that a beef had been killed at the River ranch belonging to Hancock, and that.things were out of shape, and that Audray 'thought Oscar out to know about it; that Audray and the .women then left, going to Mrs. Audray White’s ranch, and that Oscar then went to the River ranch and there found the heef hanging up in the shed and a hide hearing his own brand lying near the heef, and then after remaining there a short period of time returned to the Ballard ranch; there was no evidence that Oscar White had been at the River ranch at any time either during that day, being Sunday, or the preceding day. The evidence further shows that when the Hancocks went to the River ranch and found the beef in the shed, the hide found at that time bore the Hancock brand, which hide was taken by the Hancocks, and that R. W. Hancock returned that evening with the sheriff and found the meat still hanging there, cold, and the hide, which Oscar White saw bearing his brand, lying there in the shed, but warm and bloody, with only three feet on it. The next morning Hancock returned to the River ranch together with the officers and followed some tracks leading away from the place for about a mile and a half where they found a beef carcass which had been freshly skinned, without a hide, but which carcass had one foot on it, apparently being the carcass belonging to the hide bearing the Oscar White brand substituted for the hide hearing the Hancock brand in the shed with the beef.

As to James Audray White, the evidence further discloses that he left his ranch on December 13, 1930, Saturday, for the purpose of gathering some strayed cattle, and that he met with Oscar White as above stated, and, after parting, proceeded to the River ranch arriving alone a short time before night, where he met one Frank Johnson, who soon left, and that James Audray White stayed at the camp all night, and that about two o’clock Sunday morning his wife and Ducille Barker came to the house and stayed there all night and all of that part of the next day, Sunday, until late in the afternoon when they left to return to their own ranch, during which time James Audray White went to Pony Lake and informed Oscar White about the killing of a beef as above set forth. The evidence further shows that on Sunday morning James Audray White went to the shed and cut off a piece of the beef hanging there, and cooked it for breakfast, and that the butchered beef hanging in the shed had been cut up “cowboy style” with a cleaver or axe, not sawed, and that an axe was found close to the shed with finger prints thereon which were the finger prints of James Audray White, and that James Audray White admitted handling the axe with bloody hands.

On the above evidence the jury brought in a verdict of guilty as to the two defendants, Oscar White and James Audray White.

At the conclusion of all the evidence the defendants moved for an instructed verdict in their behalf, which motion was denied.

The court erred in denying the motion of Oscar White for an instructed verdict in his behalf at the close of the case. The evidence introduced by the defense, which adds nothing very substantial to the state’s case as to Oscar White, is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty as to him. True he owned the River ranch where the beef was found, and was seen three or four miles from that place on the afternoon before the crime was committed, but that with, the other facts above set forth is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty. The River ranch was unoccupied, open to every one, and the possession or ownership of the ranch by Oscar White and the shed wherein the stolen -beef was found does not raise a presumption of his guilt. There was no evidence that the shed was locked or closed in such manner that no one except Oscar White could enter it; but on the contrary the very facts disclosed by the evidence show conclusively that it was used by others.

The state contends that while recent unexplained possession of stolen property standing alone does not justify conviction of larceny, but that such possession with slight corroboration of other inculpatory evidence to show guilt is sufficient.

There is no evidence that Oscar White had anything but constructive possession of the beef. Possession of the fruits of crime to raise a presumption of the guilt of the possessor involves knowledge, -dominion, and control, with power of disposal, or voice in the power of disposal, in the alleged possessor.

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 192, 37 N.M. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-nm-1933.