Stone v. State

1936 OK CR 110, 61 P.2d 41, 60 Okla. Crim. 22, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1936
DocketNo. A-9033.
StatusPublished

This text of 1936 OK CR 110 (Stone v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. State, 1936 OK CR 110, 61 P.2d 41, 60 Okla. Crim. 22, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 81 (Okla. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The plaintiff in error was by information jointly charged with Perry W. Morton, tried separately, convicted, and sentenced to serve a term of two and one-half years in the state penitentiary. Motion for new trial was filed, considered, overruled, and the plaintiff in error has appealed. The plaintiff in error hereinafter in this opinion will he referred to as the defendant.

The charge against the defendant is that he received one $100, per cent. Liberty Loan Bond, No. 552860, of the value of $100, knowing the same to have been stolen from the Farmers National Bank, of Lincoln, Kan., which *24 bond it is alleged was the personal property of Mrs. Sarah E. Hayden.

The testimony on behalf of the state shows that Mrs. Sarah E. Hayden had delivered the $100, 4% per cent. Liberty Loan Bond, No. 552860, to the Farmers National Bank, of Lincoln, Kan., for safekeeping, the bank becoming the custodian for Mrs. Hayden. The testimony further shows that this bond, together with several others, was stolen from the bank.

The state called Berry W. Morton, who testified in substance:

“I am one of the defendants in this case; I am an attorney at law, practicing in Oklahoma City, have been in Oklahoma City about five years; my office is on the eighth floor of the Ramsey Tower. During the month of April, 1933, Seth Stone was introduced to me by a man named Duncan; the defendant Stone stated to me his brother had been convicted in the district court of Shawnee and sentenced to 10 years; defendant Stone said he had some Liberty bonds, but he did not have any money, and I said, ‘All right, I had just as soon have Liberty bonds as money.’ After some discussion he said, ‘But they are hot;’ he said they had been stolen in Kansas, or some place other than Oklahoma. I think it was the next day he came back to my office and brought a $100 bond. State Exhibit 1 is the bond that Seth Stone brought to me at my office.
“After the bond was delivered to me, I let John Adams, and another man by the name of Hooper, I think he was a private detective, and a man by the name of Guy Zingerly, have the bond, which was afterwards returned to me. I saw Seth Stone later in my car in front of the house in which he lived on West Twenty-Fourth Street. I had a conversation with him in the presence of Mr. Zingerly, in which conversation Stone said he could deliver a large number of bonds worth something like *25 30 some thousand or 50 some thousand. We talked about the sale of these bonds, and the defendant Seth Stone said he would have to get better than 11 cents on the dollar for the bonds; he also said he would have to have some $25 in money; that he would have to wire some man, I think he said in Joplin, Mo., the money to be used to pay the expenses of this man to Oklahoma City; that this fellow had been down a time or two to help him sell the bonds and that he would not return unless we furnished him with expense money. We did not furnish the money, and he said he guessed he would do that. I do not know whether he did or not.
“The next time I saw the defendant was about the 13th of April. Zingerly and I had gone to the room in the hotel and talked with a man who was introduced as a Mr. Wilson, as a booster. This man Wilson said he would buy the bonds and pay 16 cents on the dollar. I called Stone’s residence and told him Wilson wanted to buy the bonds and told him he would pay 16 cents, and he said, ‘you had better drive out.’ I think that was all that was said in the conversation. I went out and talked with him and gave him Wilson’s room number at the hotel; I told him Wilson wanted him to bring all the bonds he had or could get at one trip, he wanted to leave town. Stone said, ‘No, I won’t do that, I will take one of them,’ and, if everything was all right, he would bring the balance of them. ‘You fellows go and wait for me in the lobby of the Skirvin Hotel.’ Stone said he had the bonds.
“I did not see Stone again until after he was arrested and I was in custody. This bond, State Exhibit 1, at the time of my visit to Stone, and all of this conversation, was in the drawer of my desk in my office in the Ramsey Tower. After we were arrested, a federal employee named Cooley took me up to my office and I got it out of the desk and handed it to him. At the time I was talking to Wilson about the bonds in the hotel I did not know he was a federal officer.”

*26 On cross-examination this witness stated, when he talked to John Adams and gave him the bond, he knew Adams was a deputy sheriff.

“I gave Adams the bond before I talked with Wilson; I was helping this man to sell the bonds; I did not know Wilson was an officer; I came from Eldorado, Ark., to Oklahoma City. There were a number of men who had offices in the same suite of rooms in which I was officing. Duncan left immediately after introducing me to Mr. Stone. Before leaving, Duncan said, ‘Stone, this is the man I was talking with you about,’ and told me who he was. I did not go into his brother’s case; I talked to him as an individual, and he told me he could not pay me except in hot Liberty bonds. He had not submitted any bond to me at that time; he gave me the bond on his second visit to the office. State Exhibit 1 is the bond he delivered to me in my office. I never gave Seth Stone any money. I learned Mr. Zingerly was dead through a friend of mine. I never heard of a man by the name of Wagner until I saw in the paper a few months after this where he had been arrested in California when alighting from an aeroplane.
“I received this bond, which is State Exhibit 1, from Stone about the 5th or 6th of April, 1983. I called the defendant from the Sldrvin Hotel and had a conversation with him on the 13th day of April, 1933, and then drove out to his house; I asked him if he had the bonds, the defendant wanted to know if we wanted all of them, and said, ‘Yes, I have them,’ and fingered with some papers in his pocket; I don’t know whether they were bonds or not — I would not say they looked like bonds. I was not present at the hotel room when Seth Stone came in; I was only in the room once. Zingerly and I were to meet Seth Stone in the lobby. We were expecting him when the officers arrested us. I did not see Stone at the hotel.”

G. B. Wilson stated:

“I am an Operative U. S. Secret Service man. On the 12th and 13th of April, 1933, I was temporarily as *27 signed to Oklahoma City, for general assignment purposes. I have seen State Exhibit No. 1 before. Guy Zin-gerly brought this bond to our office and submitted it to Operative Cooley and myself. The bond was returned to Zingerly on or about the 9th of April, 1933. On April 13, 1933, I was introduced to Mr. Perry Morton, in room 818, Skirvin Hotel. Morton stated he was in a position to supply me with an unlimited number of those Liberty bonds. We agreed upon a price of 16 cents on the dollar. Mr. Morton made a phone call while in the room. I heard Mr. Morton say, ‘Is that you, Seth?’ and Mr.

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Related

Underwood v. State
1926 OK CR 415 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK CR 110, 61 P.2d 41, 60 Okla. Crim. 22, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-state-oklacrimapp-1936.