Young v. Commonwealth

53 S.W.2d 206, 245 Ky. 117, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 30, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 206 (Young v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Commonwealth, 53 S.W.2d 206, 245 Ky. 117, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 544 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry —

Reversing.

Appellant is appealing from a judgment of the Christian circuit court, convicting him of the crime of breaking into the storehouse of another with intent to steal and for which offense his punishment was fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of one year.

The record shows that the warehouse with which the defendant is charged with having feloniously broken into and entered for the purpose of stealing tobacco therefrom, between the dates of February 1 and February 3, 1931, is a tobacco barn owned by the prosecuting witness, W. L. Powell, and situated upon a field of his farm about midway between the Greenville pike, *118 upon which it fronts, and a rough, practically abandoned old dirt road, running along the rear of said field.

This rear dirt road extends from, the farm of Jesse Wright, by the farm and tobacco barn of the defendant Young, and then along the back of Powell’s farm out to the Greenville pike, with which it unites.

The evidence further shows that on the Sunday afternoon of February 1, W. L. Powell visited his barn and inspected his tobacco, which was bulked therein, and that, upon leaving the same, he closed and fastened its front door with a pole, or stick, at the top and a piece of iron at the bottom. Not until the following Tuesday did he return to the barn, when he found the front door still closed and fastened as when left; that is, it was still shut, with the pole resting against the top of the door, though the piece of iron at the bottom, he noticed, had been moved. Upon entering the barn and making an inspection, of its contents, Mr. Powell found that about a hundred pounds, or some $16 worth, of tobacco had been removed therefrom at some time since he was there on the preceding Sunday. Upon discovering the theft, he, with his neighbors, made an examination of the premises with a view of ascertaining how and by whom his tobacco had been stolen.

These parties, becoming commonwealth witnesses on the trial of the defendant, testified that they found the stolen tobacco had been removed by the thief through the back door of the barn and carried across the field to a wagon supposed to have been left waiting upon the rear road; that foot tracks were found across the field between the back door of the barn and this dirt road, which indicated, they state, that two trips had been made by the thief between the rear road and the barn in carrying away this tobacco, dropped leaves of which were found here and there along the course of the foot tracks. Fresh wagon tracks were found in the road nearly opposite the rear of the barn, which led from such point back to the defendant’s own tobacco barn, not far distant.

Mr. Powell, the prosecuting witness, in his testimony made no reference to his barn having also a back door, nor did he, nor any witness, testify anything whatsoever as to whether or not such back door had been left open or closed by him, upon the Sunday of *119 February 1, when last there, before he discovered the loss of his tobacco therefrom on February 3.

There is no evidence that any tracks were. found about the prosecuting witness’ front door of the barn, nor any indications that it had been broken into, except that the iron piece left Sunday at the bottom of the door had been somewhat moved by some one at some time during the interim.

The defendant in testifying as a witness in his own behalf states that he hauled some seven or eight hundred pounds of his own tobacco from his own tobacco barn over this old dirt road on the early morning of February 3 to the Hopkinsville loose-leaf floor, where he sold same. He further states that a Mr. Martin spent the preceding Monday night with him and also accompanied him on this trip made in hauling off his tobacco to Hopkinsville. In this he is supported by the testimony of the said Martin, who states that he made such trip with the defendant and that they traveled the old road back of Mr. Powell’s farm to its junction with the Greenville pike and thence on into Hopkinsville, but that no stop was made "by them, or either of them, they each testify, at the Powell farm, nor did they go upon the farm or enter or break into his tobacco barn, or take any tobacco therefrom.

Some eight or nine months after the alleged commission of this storehouse-breaking offense, the defendant was indicted by the grand jury of the Christian circuit court, and charged with commiting the offense, on the - day of February, 1931, of feloniously breaking into the tobacco barn of J. L. Powell, “with the felonious and fraudulent intent to take, steal and carry away certain amount of tobacco” therein then stored.

Upon the submission of this case to the jury, the defendant was found guilty of the alleged storehouse breaking and his punishment fixed at one year’s confinement in the penitentiary.

Defendant’s motion and grounds for a new_ trial being overruled, he prosecutes this appeal, seeking a reversal of the judgment.

By his motion and grounds, the defendant complains: (1) That the court erred in overruling his motion for á peremptory instruction made at the close of *120 the commonwealth’s evidence and renewed at the close of all the proof; (2) that the court erred in refusing to give the said peremptory instruction because the case was one of circumstantial evidence alone and the proof insufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury; and (3) that the court erred, after permitting the case to go to the jury, in refusing to give it an instruction on petit larceny, because the breaking was not shown beyond a reasonable doubt and the tobacco alleged to have been stolen was worth less than $20.

Other objections made in the motion and grounds for reversal of the judgment rendered by the lower court, but not discussed or argued in brief of counsel, we will treat as waived.

We will now consider and dispose of the objections urged for reversal, in the reverse order in which offered.

We will first address ourselves to the defendant’s complaint that the court should have incorporated in its instructions given the jury upon the housebreaking charge also an instruction on petit larceny, as being a lesser degree of the housebreaking offense charge. We deem this objection to be without merit, for the reason that the offense of larceny is not embraced or included as a lesser degree, or any degree, of the offense of housebreaking, as provided in section 1164 of the Kentucky Statutes, upon which the indictment under which defendant was here tried was based.

It has frequently been declared in the decisions of this court that the gravamen of this housebreaking offense, defined and provided by the statute supra, consists of the breaking into a storehouse with the felonious intent to steal therefrom, but the act of stealing or carrying away articles stored therein is not, by the statute, made for the purpose of charging the additional offense of larceny to have been also committed, but as showing by such “taking away” the felonious intent of the one breaking into and entering the storehouse for the purpose of stealing therefrom.

This question was considered in the case of Little v. Commonwealth, 151 Ky. 520, 152 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 206, 245 Ky. 117, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1932.