Teague v. State

1938 OK CR 66, 81 P.2d 331, 64 Okla. Crim. 369, 1938 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 24, 1938
DocketNo. A-9373.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1938 OK CR 66 (Teague 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
Teague v. State, 1938 OK CR 66, 81 P.2d 331, 64 Okla. Crim. 369, 1938 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 52 (Okla. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

BAREFOOT, J.

The defendant was charged jointly with Fred Bert Smith and Bob Nichols with the crime of larceny of live stock in Sequoyah county, was granted a severance, tried, convicted and sentenced to serve a term of five years in the penitentiary, and has appealed.

The first assignment of error is that the verdict and judgment is contrary to law and the evidence and that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the judgment and sentence, it being contended that the mule which it was alleged the defendant stole was: (1) Never identified as being the mule of Wesley DuBuc. (2) That the testimony of Fred Bert Smith, the accomplice, had been discredited and impeached and was not corroborated.

These contentions may be considered together and of necessity will require a review of the evidence.

The defendant was charged with the larceny of an iron grey mule, the property of Wesley DuBuc. The owner testified that on or about the night of November 18, 1936, he missed from his pasture near Gans, Sequoyah county, Okla., “an iron grey mule, heavy built, big boned, thick heavy bushy tail, dark brown on his legs, lighter on his back, and a flea bitten face”; that this mule had a water seed. He made an investigation and found that the mule had been taken to the Williams Sale Barn, which is located at Moffett, Sequoyah county, Okla., and near Ft. Smith, Ark., and sold *371 on the night of November 18,1936, and shipped to Memphis, Tenn. He went to Memphis and found that the mule had died after being shipped there and had been skinned. He found the hide and identified it as being taken from the mule owned by him and which had been stolen from his premises.

Fred Bert Smith, who was indicted jointly with this defendant, and who, under the law of this state was an accomplice, and whose testimony would, therefore, have to be corroborated, testified as a witness for the state. He said he had known Wesley DuBuc all of his life; that he had worked for him, and had worked the mule which was stolen and ridden behind it; that he had known the defendant Joe Teague for a couple of years, and that he had known his co-defendant Bob Nichols for two or three years, and had at one time lived a neighbor to him; that several weeks prior to November 18, 1936, the three of them had a conversation with reference to stealing some mules, and that defendant Joe Teague, who bought and sold mules on the market at Williams barn at Moffett, had told them he could use some “hot” mules, and that he would sell them on the “halves”; that about two weeks prior to the stealing of the mule on November 18, 1936, he and Bob Nichols had made an attempt to steal the DuBuc mule, and the defendant Joe Teague had made arrangements for a truck to meet them on the highway by the side of the road, and get the mule; that he and Bob Nichols went out for the purpose of getting the mule, but did not get it on that night; that he went on home and Bob Nichols went up the road to meet the truck. This testimony was afterwards corroborated by Jeff Lambert, who owned and operated a truck; that he had a talk with the defendant Joe Teague and agreed to send a truck up the highway near Muldrow (this was where the stolen mule was afterwards loaded) at night for the purpose of getting two mules; that he did not know they were stolen. He sent two men who were working for him, J. W. Mc-Water and Roy Goodwin. Both of these witnesses testifying *372 for the state stated that they went in the truck after the mules; that the defendant Joe Teague told them where to go, and that they would meet a man by the side of the road with the mules; that they met a man by the side of the road whom they identified as the codefendant Bob Nichols; that he got in the truck and rode with them, and that they went nearly to Sallisaw, but did not see anyone with any mules and returned about 11 o’clock. The witness Fred Bert Smith then testified that he saw the defendant on the evening of the 18th of November, 1936, and that defendant told him he could use “them mules now”, and that he and the defendant, and his codefendant agreed to get the mule that night; that defendant made arrangements for the truck to meet them, and that he and Bob Nichols left the barn about 4 o’clock and went south, and that they went into the pasture and got the mule; that Bob Nichols got in the car and went back, and that he led the mule to the foot of Nolin Hill, and Bob came there with the truck about 10 o’clock at night; that they loaded the mule on the truck and took it to Moffett to the back of the Leon Williams Barn and unloaded it; that Bob Nichols led the mule into the truck after they had blindfolded it, and he and the boy who was driving the truck punched it into the truck.

George Freeman, the boy who drove the truck, corroborated the witness’s evidence to this effect. He testified that the defendant Joe Teague came to where he was on the night of November 18, 1936, after the sale had closed, and about 10:30 or 11 o’clock, and asked him if he had his truck with him, and he said “a boy had a mule, two mules, he wanted me to go and get”. He identified Bob Nichols as being the boy who said he had a couple of mules he wanted him to go and get, and that they got in the truck, and went close to a little town and turned over on a hill, “and there came a boy leading a mule up the road”. That they loaded the mule on the truck, and brought it to the Williams barn at Moffett, just as the witness Fred Bert Smith had testified.

*373 Smith testified to the unloading of the mule by himself, Bob Nichols, George Freeman, the truck driver, and a negro boy who worked at the barn named “Doe”. That the mule was sold at the Leon Williams barn that night for $117; that the defendant Joe Teague and Bob Nichols came to the rear of the barn soon after the mule was unloaded; that the check was made out in his name; that the boy who drove the truck, George Freeman, wanted his pay, and he tried to cash the check, but could not do so; that George Freeman went and saw the defendant Joe Teague and he indorsed the check and Jack Gentry, the proprietor of the Brown Bungalow, cashed the check, giving him $13 in money and a $61 check and a $43 check; that he paid the truck driver, George Freeman, $3, gave the $61 check to Bob Nichols, and he cashed it at Bob Harper’s; that he took the $43 check and cashed it at Jack Gentry’s and gave the defendant Joe Teague $12.50 of it, and gave the balance to Bob Nichols, and he only got $21 out of the check; that he was afterwards arrested and put in jail and made a statement to the officers which was the same as he was now making on the witness stand; that he was scared at the time he made the statement.

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Related

Simmons v. State
549 P.2d 111 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1976)
Huckaby v. State
1973 OK CR 216 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1973)
Woody v. State
1951 OK CR 155 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1951)
Anderson v. State
1944 OK CR 77 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1944)
Butler v. State
1944 OK CR 5 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1944)
Hathcoat v. State
1940 OK CR 143 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1940)
Wilkins v. State
1940 OK CR 81 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1938 OK CR 66, 81 P.2d 331, 64 Okla. Crim. 369, 1938 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teague-v-state-oklacrimapp-1938.