Appellant was convicted of the theft of an overcoat, and his punishment fixed at sixty days imprisonment in the county jail, and a fine of $25; hence this appeal.
The allegation in the complaint and information is that the property was in the possession of R.M. Payne. The proof shows that R.M. Payne was the jailer, and the coat in fact belonged to Prof. Ater, who had been adjudged insane, and sent from the jail to the asylum. He and his wife had told Payne (the jailer) to keep possession of the coat until they called for it. The possession was properly alleged. Appellant objects and says there is a variance between the allegations and the proof, because the proof showed merely that the jailer's name was Roscoe Payne, and there was no evidence showing that he had a middle initial of "M." On another trial, this can be obviated, so it is not necessary to discuss it.
Appellant excepted to the refusal of the court to give his special requested charges numbers 1 and 3. These instructions present the question that he took the coat for temporary use and not to permanently appropriate the same. The court failed to give any charge on this subject. *Page 361 The only question is, was the evidence sufficient to require these requested special instructions. We think so. The evidence showed that the coat was taken by appellant from a valise in the jail, and worn to a negro party in the neighborhood; that appellant left the coat at another negro's, named Matthews, on his way back; that subsequently he told Matthews it was Payne's coat, and he was going to try to buy it from him. About a month or six weeks after he had taken the coat, he told Payne he had taken it; and when Payne told him to bring it back he told him the rats had eaten it up. Payne told him he would have to account for the coat. He then told him he had it at Matthews, and would bring it back; that he merely took it to wear to the party. He did not bring it back; left Payne, and was working some twelve miles from his house. When he was arrested for the theft of this coat, the coat was restored. We think under these circumstances the requested charges, one or both, should have been given by the judge to the jury in order that they might pass upon appellant's defense of taking the coat for a mere temporary use, and with no purpose of permanently appropriating it. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.