Thurmond v. State

Appellant was convicted of the theft of one head of cattle, and given two years in the penitentiary, and prosecutes this appeal. The defendant assigns as error the fact that as many as twenty-four jurors were not drawn and placed in the box when the jury was empaneled, from which the jury in this case was to be constituted. The bill of exceptions shows that a number of the regular list of jurors was out, trying a case, at the time, and that as many as twenty-four of the regular jury were not then in attendance on the court. The court refused to wait on the other jury to come in, and he certifies that they remained out some nineteen hours after the verdict in the present case was returned into court; that sixteen jurors were in attendance on the court when this case was called for trial, and their names were placed in the box; and that seven jurors were secured from said list, and then the talesmen were summoned out of which the remainder of the jury was secured. In this action of the court there was no error. See, Code Crim. Proc. 1895, Arts. 683-686. Nor was there any error in the admission of the record of the copy of the marks and brands of Jones *Page 423 County, showing the record of the marks and brands of the cattle of F.D. Young as recorded in said county. While the calf in question was not marked and branded, its ownership depended on the fact that it was the calf of a cow belonging to F.D. Young; and it was competent to introduce the record copy of marks and brands to show the ownership of said cow, and so establish the ownership of said calf. Nor was it error for the court to refuse to give the requested instructions of the defendant on this subject, as said charge involved the converse of the proposition on which the copy of the marks and brands was admitted as above set out. Defendant's bills of exception Nos. 4 and 5 are predicated upon the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested as to the identity and ownership of the calf in question. The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury as follows: "First. That unless they believed from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the yearling killed by the defendant, if any was killed by him, was the same identical calf, and not another and different calf, of the cow described by Frank Young, the prosecuting witness herein, the jury will acquit the defendant. Second. That, before you will be authorized to convict the defendant in this case, you must believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, and to a moral certainty, that the cow seen in the possession of the defendant by Terrell Winter, if any was seen in defendant's possession by said Winter, was the property of the said Frank Young, and that the calf of the said cow, at the time said Winter saw said cow in possession of the defendant, was the calf of the said cow, and that the calf was the same identical calf that was killed by the defendant, if any was killed by the said defendant, and unless you so believe you must acquit the defendant." And in this connection the proof was substantially as follows: The State proved that the cow of Frank Young, in the HY brand, which was his brand, was running on the range near where the defendant lived, and that she had a little red calf with some white on its face and breast and belly. The calf was known by a number of witnesses as the calf of Young's cow, and was unmarked, and not branded. On the day it was killed the defendant was seen driving the cow and calf, with four other head of cattle, down the lane, in the direction of Martin's pasture, and was seen to pen the same in said pasture. That evening defendant killed a calf in Martin's lot, which was of the same general description as the calf of the cow in question. The cow was turned on the range, and was seen the next day, and repeatedly thereafter, but the calf was never seen with her again. The defendant, who testified in his own behalf, claimed that the calf he killed was the calf of a cow that he had bought a number of years before, and that he had not seen her for a long time, until shortly before he had found her on the range there, with the calf, and that he drove her up and killed the calf on that evening. No other witnesses testify to this fact, but the defendant. The State introduced in rebuttal a witness who testified that he knew the bunch of cattle in the brand claimed by the defendant, but none of said *Page 424 brand of cattle had been in that neighborhood for seven years. On this state of facts the court charged on circumstantial evidence, and, applying the law to the facts of the case, instructed the jury "that they must believe, beyond a reasonable doubt, before they could convict the defendant, that he fraudulently took from the possession of Frank Young the head of cattle charged, and that the same was his personal property, without the consent of the said Young," etc. Now, in order to find this fact, it was absolutely necessary for the jury to find the converse of the facts set up by the defendant, to-wit: that the calf he killed was his own; and in our opinion the charge given, involving a negative finding as to that asked, was sufficient. It will be noted that there is no affirmative charge to the effect that if the jury believed the calf in question was the property of the defendant, as testified by him, that they would find him not guilty. This would have been a direct and affirmative charge involving his theory, but even if this had been asked, in our opinion, the charge given involved directly a finding by the jury as to the theory of the defense set up by the defendant — that is, before they were authorized to find the defendant guilty, they were instructed, in accordance with the rules governing circumstantial evidence, to find that the animal in question was the property of Young; and, as stated before, we think this was all that was necessary. The testimony in the case sustains the verdict of the jury, and, there being no errors in the record, the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.