Lindley v. State

Court: Court of Appeals of Texas
Date filed: 1880-07-01
Citations: 8 Tex. Ct. App. 445
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Lead Opinion
Winkler, J.

In order to convict the defendant, agreeably to the statement of facts, it became necessary for the jury to determine from the evidence that the animal or animals charged to have been stolen from the alleged owner were taken in Navarro County. On this question the evidence was purely circumstantial, which rendered it necessary for the judge to give to the jury an appropriate charge on circumstantial evidence. This the court failed to do. In charging a jury in a case of theft, it is incumbent on the judge to give the jury an accurate definition of the crime, either in the language of the law or in his own language. It is a part of the definition of the offence of theft that the property was taken without the consent of the owner, or the person holding possession of the property.

“ Theft is the fraudulent taking of corporeal personal property belonging to another from his possession, or from the possession of some person holding the same for him, without his consent, with intent to deprive the owner of the value of the same, and to appropriate it to the use or benefit of the person taking.” Penal Code, art. 724. The judge, in defining the offence in his charge, omitted to inform the jury, among the other things necessary for them

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to believe from- the testimony, that they must believe that the property was taken without the owner’s consent.

On account of these errors in the charge of the court, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.

Reversed and remanded.