Tatum v. State

85 N.W. 40, 61 Neb. 229, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 7
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1901
DocketNo. 11,238
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 85 N.W. 40 (Tatum v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tatum v. State, 85 N.W. 40, 61 Neb. 229, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 7 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The defendant, plaintiff in error, was informed against and convicted of the crime of horse stealing at the January, 1900, term of the district court of Buffalo county. Just preceding the trial different applications were made by the defendant for a continuance of the cause, which were overruled. The ruling thereon is assigned as error.

It appears fi*om the record that, after a preliminary examination an information was filed in the district court, at the September, 1899, term, charging the defendant with the crime mentioned, to which, upon arraignment, he entered a plea of not guilty, and the cause was thereupon continued until the next term, which convened November 20, the defendant entering into a recognizance for his appearance at such time to answer the charge prefeiTed against him-. At the November term, and on the 22d of the .month, the defendant presented a motion, supported by affidavit, for a continuance .until the next regular term, for the purpose of making preparation for trial, and procuring evidence alleged to be material for Ms defense. The application ivas granted and the cause continued until the next term. The next regular term convened on January 29, 1900, at which time another motion was presented by defendant for a further continuance, which was overruled and the case set for hearing on the 31st. On that day yet another motion for a continuance was filed, which was also overruled,, and the case proceeded to trial.

In the application for a continuance, at the beginning of the term, at which the trial was had, the reasons assigned therefor were that the defendant had not prepared for trial because accumulated business of his counsel had prevented the necessary steps to secure evidence material in the case and necessary to a proper hearing thereof, and that the term of court had been called earlier than was anticipated. The proposed evidence was that of unknown persons, and the probability of procuring it was [231]*231extremely indefinite and uncertain. The witnesses from whom the proposed evidence was to be had were to be found and their testimony procured after a trip was made to St. Louis, Missouri, where it is claimed a car load of horses was shipped, in which shipment, according to the theory of the state, were included the two horses alleged to have been stolen by the defendant. The proposed evidence, when discovered, was for the purpose of disproving the shipment of any horses answering the description of those alleged to have been stolen. In the showing for a continuance it was stated that the defendant could not prove what horses were received by the consignees except by the consignees themselves; but (here was omitted all reference to any evidence, which might be procured, showing what horses were in fact loaded into the car at the place of shipment, in the county adjoining that in which the larceny was committed. By (he record it is disclosed this testimony was procurable, and was introduced by the defendant for the purpose of establishing the same fact it was proposed to prove by the unknown consignees of the shipment. It also appears that no effort was made, prior to the time of the application for a continuance, to procure the testimony spoken of. The application was clearly insufficient and failed to state any of the essential requirements of diligence, materiality of evidence, and reasonable probability of procuring it from the sources relied oh. It is also quite apparent that testimony of the same character, pertaining to the same alleged facts, was procurable from those having knowledge of the shipment from the place where made, and near the place where the alleged offense was committed, to procure which no effort appears to have been made at that time. Upon the overruling of the application subpoenas were issued, at defendant’s request, for different witnesses to appear and testify in his behalf. The subpoenas were served on some and returned not found as to others. On the day set for trial, another application for a continuance was presented on [232]*232the ground of the absence of the witnesses not found. As to the last application, it was presented out of season, and there is an utter lack of diligence shown. The ruling thereon was proper. A perusal of the record does not impress us that diligence or reasonable effort was made to procure the presence of the witnesses whose absence is made the basis for the application.- They all resided at points convenient to the place of trial, and a seasonable effort to procure their attendance would no doubt have been successful.

Many objections are made and exceptions taken to the introduction of testimony on the trial of the case. It will be unprofitable to note and discuss the objections in detail. We have carefully examined the record, and find no prejudicial error in the admission or rejection of the testimony.

Strenuous complaint is made because of certain impeaching evidence admitted to contradict a witness for the defense. It is urged that the contradiction is upon an immaterial point, and, therefore, the evidence was improperly and erroneously admitted. The property alleged to have been stolen consisted of two mares belonging to an uncle of the defendant, residing in the city of Kearney, Buffalo county. The theft was alleged to have occurred on the night of the 31st of March, 1899. This was Friday night. The theory of the state is that the horses were taken by the accused on the night mentioned from the stable of the owner and led by- him behind a team and buggy, which he drove to the town of Minden, about twenty miles distant, and there disposed of to one Watt, who, on the Sunday following, shipped them with a car load of horses out of the state. The state offered evidence, which, if believed by the jury, as they evidently did and were justified in doing so, tended to show that the two mares were by the defendant taken from the stable on the night mentioned, and to the livery barn of the said Watt at Minden, and at the request of the accused, taken to a stall in the back part of the barn. By [233]*233one witness the property was clearly and accurately described as the two mares claimed to have been stolen. The horses were brought to the barn about midnight. The owner of the barn was called from his house, and he and the accused had a conversation of some duration, during which he claims to have purchased the horses. After this the accused, with the same team with which he had driven to Minden, returned to Kearney, where he resided. On the next morning, being Saturday, at the direction of Watt, the team was taken from the livery barn and placed in the private barn of a resident of the town, where it remained until Sunday morning, when, with other horses, it was shipped out of the state. On the trial Watt was a witness for the defendant, and testified to the accused bringing a team to his place on the night mentioned; to his purchase of the same, and to liis removal of them to a separate barn the next morning, and their shipment on the Sunday morning following. In describing the horses he purchased, he testified that one was a gelding and one was a mare. Over objection the state was permitted to ask the witness if he had not stated to the owner, who seems to have gone to Minden in search of his team on the Sunday afternoon of the day when the horses were shipped, that no mares were shipped in the car load that was shipped that day. He.

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Related

State v. Brown
118 N.W.2d 328 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1962)
Lee v. State
245 N.W. 445 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1932)
Porter v. State
186 N.W. 1006 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.W. 40, 61 Neb. 229, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tatum-v-state-neb-1901.