By the Court,
Currey, J.■ The defendant was indicted for grand larceny. He was tried and found guilty and sentenced to be imprisoned in the State Prison for the term of five years. The evidence against him was mostly of a circumstantial nature, and though it is not insisted, it was not sufficient to warrant a verdict of guilty, if the case had been properly submitted to the jury, yet the defendant claims that the Court erred in matters of law on the trial to his prejudice, and that in consequence thereof the verdict and the judgment pronounced upon it should be reversed.
At the request of the District Attorney the Court instructed the jury as follows : “Although the jury are to be satisfied of the guilt of the defendant in order to convict, yet they have a right to take into consideratipn all the surrounding circumstances in making up their verdict, and if from such circumstances they believe, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the prisoner is guilty, although there may have been no eye witness of his taking the property, they must find a verdict of guilty.” The defendant’s counsel insists that the instruction did not limit the jury to the circumstances proved in the case. It must be presumed the Court was speaking of the circumstances which were in evidence, and that the jury understood the charge as referring to those circumstances and none others; because in such cases the jury is presumed to be composed of “ good and lawful men,” possessed of at least ordinary good sense, and capable of appreciating the obligation of their oaths to render a verdict “ according to the evi*426deuce.” The obvious meaning of the instruction is this, that if the jury, from all the circumstances in evidence, believed without any reasonable doubt intervening, that the defendant was guilty of the crime alleged against him, then the verdict should be in accordance with such belief, even though no one saw the defendant steal the money described in the indictment. The instruction is an inculcation of a plain rule of law, namely, that if the circumstances proved establish the truth of the fact in issue to a reasonable and moral certainty; a certainty that convinces and directs the understanding and satisfies the reason and judgment honestly and conscientiously exercised, then the verdict should in effect determine the existence of such fact; or in other words, should be according to the evidence. (Com. v. Webster, 5 Cush. 320 ; Sumner v. The State, 5 Blackf. 580.)
The Court also instructed the jury, at the request of the District Attorney, in the following words : “ If the jury bel.ieve that the property was stolen and was found in the possession of the prisoner very shortly after being stolen, and the prisoner failed to account for such possession, or to show that such possession was honestly obtained, it is a circumstance tending to show his guilt; and the accused is bound to explain the possession in order to remove the effect of the possession as a circumstance to be considered in connection with other suspicious facts.”
The fact of recent possession of stolen property standing wholly unconnected with any other circumstances, is of very slight persausive force. (3 Greenleaf’s Ev., Sec. 31.) But the circumstance is permitted to be proved as a relevant fact, constituting an item of the aggregate of facts and circumstances necessary to warrant the conclusion of the.defendant’s guilt. While a single circumstance' tending to establish the truth of the charge might not authorize the conclusion that the charge was true, all the circumstances, of which the circumstance merely tending to establish the main fact was one, might, taken together, be of a conclusive nature, and satisfy *427the jury to a moral certainty and beyond all reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt.
In The People v. Ah Ki, 20 Cal. 178, the Court charged the jury that the accused was bound to explain his possession of goods recently stolen, and how he obtained them. In reviewing this charge Mr. Justice Norton' held that its effect was to convey to the jury the idea that the possession of the stolen goods, unexplained, was of itself sufficient to authorize a conviction, contrary to the rule laid down in The People v. Chamhers, 18 Cal. 382; but he said: “If this charge could be understood as only stating that the accused was bound to explain the possession, in order to remove the effect of the possession as a circumstance to be considered in connection with other suspicious facts, it would not be erroneous.”
The instruction under consideration conforms to the law as declared in the case of The People v. Ah Ki, and is in no sense repugnant to the doctrine laid down in The People v. Chambers, or of the recent case of The People v. Antonio, and hence we hold the instruction correct.
The counsel for the defendant submitted nine instructions which he asked the Court to give the jury—seven of which the Court gave, but refused the others for reasons assigned, which will be stated hereafter.
The instructions given comprehended in clear and direct language the questions of law involved in the case. If the jury heeded these instructions, as we must intend they did, we do not see how any injury could have resulted to the defendant from the refusal of the Court to give the other instructions requested, of which the jury knew nothing, even were it admitted that they embodied the law as it is; for it is not to be presumed that either the Court or counsel read to or in the presence of the jury the requested instructions which the Court refused to grant. Requested instruction number two the Court refused on the ground that it was calculated to mislead the jury as to the law. It reads as follows: “ The People must make out their case by evidence that will amount to proof of the facts alleged in the indictment, and the defend*428ant is not required to produce evidence to rebut such evidence on the part of the prosecution as merely tends to prove the fact in question.” The portion of the instructions given was, in effect, the same as that covered by the first proposition contained in the requested proposition here set forth in hcec verba, and in connection therewith the jury were told that proof beyond a reasonable doubt was necessary to establish a fact against the prisoner, and that if there was any such doubt as to any particular fact essential to be proved to establish the defendant’s guilt, he was entitled to the benefit of the doubt and to be acquitted; and, also, that if, upon a review of the evidence, there existed in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt as to the defendant taking the property, as charged in the indictment, then he must be acquitted.
The second branch of this requested instruction that “ the defendant is not required to produce evidence to rebut such evidence on the part of the prosecution as merely tends to prove the fact in question ” in order to secure Ms acquittal, as abstractly stated, was properly refused, because evidence which merely tends to prove a material fact may become a constituent portion of the aggregate of proof which in its sum establishes the principal matter in issue beyond all reasonable doubt. Then, when in the first place a criminal charge is made out by all the evidence taken together, the defendant is bound, in order to overcome the case so made, to produce evidence in rebuttal, which evidence in rebuttal may be directed to and necessary for the overthrow of that produced on the side of the prosecution tending merely to the proof of a material fact. Hence, to have charged the jury as requested would have been improper.
Requested instruction number eight the Court refused to give to the jury on substantially the same ground as in the one noticed. It reads as follows: “ Even though the jury, should believe from the evidence that the money was stolen, and was found in the possession of defendant within a short time after its taking, the defendant is not hound to show to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that he became pos*429sessed of it otherwise than by stealing. The evidence may fall far short of establishing that, and yet create in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt as to his guilt.” This instruction proceeds upon the theory that the only evidence in the case going to show that the defendant was guilty consisted in the fact that the stolen money was found in his possession soon after it was stolen. If it were admitted that the defendant’s recent possession of the stolen property was the only evidence against him, the substantive portion of the requested charge would have been in consonance with the law as declared in The People v. Chambers. The rule relating to the question passed on in the case last cited was well stated in one of the instructions given by the Court to the jury at the defendant’s request in the following words: “Even if the jury believe that the defendant had possession of the property, and that the same had been recently stolen, the fact is not of itself sufficient to authorize his conviction ; it is merely a circumstance to be considered in determining his guilt.”
The charge and instructions given seem to have been full, and a just exposition of the law applicable to the case before the jury. We are of the opinion the judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.