Appellant was convicted of cattle theft and assessed the lowest punishment.
The question in the case is, whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the conviction.- When this is the question, all incriminating testimony and all reasonable deductions that may be drawn therefrom must be considered against an appellant and if sufficient to justify the verdict, must be held against him.
Appellant did not testify and introduced no witness, except one to testify that he had never before been convicted of any felony, so that if convicted he could get his sentence suspended.
The one head of cattle, a calf about six months old, alleged to have been stolen was amply identified as the property of the alleged owner and was shown to have been stolen from him on or- about the date alleged. Joseph Sc-hmerber, Jr., was also indicted for the theft of the same calf. His case was next on the docket after appellant’s. On Saturday, June 10, 1916, Alberto Casos, a goat herder, found said calf tied to a mesquite tree in a thick, brushy place in a certain pasture. He reported the facts to his employer when he went home that evening. His employer informed Mr. Lehmann. The officers and others were also informed. Mr. Lehmann, the officers and others the next morning went to the place where said calf had been tied. They found on the ground there where the calf had been tied and also the tracks of two *319persons and the tracks of a vehicle drawn by one horse. They tracked the horse and vehicle from this place for some distance towards Eagle Pass and until the vehicle got in the Eagle Pass public road. They could track it no further.
Mr. Wyrick traveled said road from Eagle Pass to his brother’s place Sunday morning. He met said Sehmerber and another yonng Mexican with him who were in an express wagon drawn by one horse and had said calf in the wagon. He did not know whether the other yonng Mexican was appellant or not. They were going towards Eagle Pass.
Andres Barrientes, who it appears was a butcher in Eagle Pass, testified that appellant alone came to his house and told him said Sehmerber would sell him the calf and told him to take it (or go) to a certain dairy, “and I paid them there for the calf.” He knew both appellant and said Sehmerber. He said: “I bought a calf from this defendant and Joseph Sehmerber, Jr.” That he paid $7 for the calf, killed and sold it and sold the hide on the same day to Mr. McAlpin, a hide dealer. He further said: “Sehmerber and this defendant were together when they brought the- calf there.” He also further swore that he bought the calf from Sehmerber — didn’t buy it from this defendant. And further: “I don’t know whether they came together or not, but they were together when I got there and bought it, and they gave me a bill of sale to the calf.” That he bought it from Sehmerber, who alone signed the- bill of sale. “This defendant did not sell me the calf, and I didn’t pay him for the calf. I was dealing with Sehmerber.” That he never saw appellant in possession of the calf — only saw him up there Avhen they were both together. Mr. McAlpin testified that he bought the hide of said calf at the time indicated and'later turned it over to the officers. The hide was amply identified as the hide of the stolen calf.
The above is substantially the substance and effect of the whole testimony.
The court gave a full and complete charge. He charged on circumstantial evidence and the law of principals. Ho complaint whatever is made of the court’s charge.
It will be seen that the eAridence of the butcher is contradictory. At one time he testified that he bought said calf from appellant and said Sehmerber and paid them $7 for it; that they were then together, and when he bought the calf they gave him a bill of sale to it; then again he said he did not buy it from appellant but from Sehmerber and that " he paid Sehmerber and that Sehmerber signed the bill of sale.
The talcing of the calf occurred at the time when it was first taken possession of and tied. The tracks of two persons at and around where the calf was tried would authorize the jury to conclude, and it would be a most reasonable conclusion, that two persons participated in the taking. Said Sehmerber and another young Mexican — -appellant was a young Mexican — were seen in possession of the calf soon after its taking. Appellant brought the purchaser and said Sehmerber together. *320He and no other person is shown to have been with Schmerher in connection with the sale of the calf. It is most reasonable to conclude from the evidence that appellant was that other young Mexican who was seen with Schmerher in the express wagon when they were carrying it to Eagle Pass. It would be unreasonable from the testimony to infer that any other person than appellant was with Schmerher at the time of the taking, as no other except appellant was seen with him at any time from the time of the taking until after the sale was consummated. The calf under the circumstances was apparently as much in appellant’s possession as it was in Schmerber’s, and both were seen coming from the direction where the calf had been taken and tied in possession of it.
Upon the whole, while the evidence of appellant’s guilt is somewhat weak, this writer is not prepared to hold that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction and believes that the judgment should, therefore, he affirmed.
Affirmed.