Warren v. State

1 Greene 106
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 15, 1848
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Greene 106 (Warren v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. State, 1 Greene 106 (iowa 1848).

Opinion

Opinion by

Greene, J.

The plaintiff in error was found guilty in the court below on an indictment for larcexxy. A motion was made for a new trial, and overruled. We learn fx’om the bill of exceptions that testimoxxy was adduced on the txúal, px’oviixg that about’ eighteen or nineteen months after B. S. Wilcox missed a number of traps, a boat-hook, &e., Shook, the prosecuting witness, proceeded with the officer', and a search warrant, to' the house of Warren, and, after a slight seax’di, repaired to a flax stack, five or six x’ods from the house; when [109]*109one Fulk said to the officer, that “ he was an old miner, and could strike a load in three licks.'” Though the ground was covered with snow, Shook showed Fulk where to dig; and he commenced accordingly, and, with the third blow of the mattock struck the lid of a box, identified as the property of Warren, which contained a portion of the stolen traps. They then went to the prisoner’s blacksmith, shop, and there found the boat-hook with the handle sawed' off, on the' shop floor, where it had been laying about for several months. It also appears, that Shook had been living with Warren, and that they had some difficulty a short time before the prosecution commenced. The court instructed the jury, though requested to give the contrary charge, that the fact of finding the traps in the manner described was prima facie exidence that Warren had stolen them. To this instruction of the court the plaintiff took exception, and now urges the objection under liis first two errors assigned.

This charge to the jury was manifestly erroneous. The long space of time which elapsed from the missing to the discovery of the goods, the place, together with the peculiar circumstances under which they were found, concur in removing the presumption of guilt in the prisoner. Such a presumption is only created when the goods "are found in the possession of a person, within a short period after the larceny. The lapse of three months after the articles were stolen has been recognized as sufficient to rebut the presumption of guilt, in a person in whose possession the goods were found; but it has been otherwise determined.after the expiration of only two months, when connected with evidence of concealment, and other suspicious circumstances. 1 Cowen and Hill’s Notes, 425, 426, and the references.

After the lapse of sufficient time for the goods to change hands, and when they are of a portable nature, it would often be attended with serious oppression and injustice, to require a person to account for the possession. Still more serious would be the consequences of taking a prisoner’s guilt for granted, after so remote á period, and under the circumstances which are presented in this case.'

[110]*110The place where the articles, were found the very suspicious deportment of one or two of those who participated in the finding, leave ample room to presume that others may have been more intimately connected with the larceny than the prisoner. In relation to the place, &c., of finding stolen goods, see Cowen and Hill’s Notes, 426, 427.

By request of counsel, we will briefly notice the other errors assigned. The third avers that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. As the charge to the jury was so manifestly improper, the motion fora new trial should have been granted. • The only other reason assigned for a new trial, is that of newly-discovered evidence. This is a matter usually confined to the sound discretion of the district judge; because the application is often attended with eircumstancees which are not made apparent to the appellate court. The affidavit of the prisoner alone, setting forth the newly-dicovered facts, and by whom he can prove them; taken in connection with other concurring appearances, and the applicability of the newly-discovered .evidence towards affecting a material change in the verdict, has been held sufficient to justify a new trial, without the affidavit of the witness by whom the facts are expected to be proven; but the requirement of such an affidavit we regard as the safest practice,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Greene 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-state-iowa-1848.