The defendant, Claud Turner, appeals from a conviction of the crime of grand larceny, alleged to have been committed by stealing five hats, of the value of $4.50 each, the property of the Pacific Express Company, a corporation.
Packages containing men’s hats were consigned over the Pacific Express Company to Dickerson Bros., a firm of merchants at Fulton, Ark., and after the packages were unloaded at the railroad station at Fulton, and whilst still in the possession of the express company, one was broken open and several hats stolen therefrom.
Some of the hats were found in the barn where defendant kept his team, and there was proof that defendant sold hats of the description of those stolen, about the time the larceny was committed.
In addition to that, evidence was adduced to the effect that defendant confessed his guilt, and offered to enter a plea of petit larceny.
The hats were proved to be of sufficient value to make the offense grand larceny.
The testimony was abundant to sustain the conviction. The officer who arrested defendant testified that, after the arrest had been made, defendant confessed his guilt of- the crime charged, and that he (the officer) advised him that “it was the best to plead guilty and get the lowest punishment, probably a fine,” or something to that effect. The witness stated that he thought the confession preceded the advice which he gave defendant, but he was not sure about that, and the court refused to allow the testimony of that witness to go to the jury.
But another witness was allowed to testify, over defendant’s objection, that the latter admitted his guilt, and offered to plead guilty to petit larceny.
It is insisted that this ruling of the court was erroneous, and prejudicial.
That witness was the justice of the peace before whom defendant was taken for -examination, and he testified that defendant’s confession was after he had made an offer to the prosecuting attorney to plead guilty, and that officer had refused to accept the plea, and had told the defendant that he couldn’t promise him anything in the way of leniency. The witness testified that, after that conversation with the prosecuting attorney, the defendant, upon being asked whether he was guilty or not guilty, entered a plea of guilty.
Counsel for defendant invoke the rule that, when improper influences have been exerted to obtain a confession from one accused of crime, the “presumption arises that a subsequent confession of the same crime flows from that influence.”
That contention, it is true, involves a correct proposition of law; but it is equally well settled that such presumption “may be overcome by positive evidence that the subsequent confession was given free from undue influence.” Smith v. State, 74 Ark. 397.
The testimony of the justice of the peace was, we think, sufficient to warrant the court in holding that the promise of a lower punishment had been revoked, and that the last confession was voluntarily given without any inducement or influence. All that the arresting officer had said to defendant was to advise him to “plead guilty and get the lowest punishment,” but the prosecuting attorney had expressly declinéd to extend any leniency, so that it was a question primarily for the court, and then for the jury, to determine whether the last confession was voluntarily given free from any inducement. In other words, the evidence of the justice of the peace was sufficient to overcome the presumption that the confession flowed from the original promise or advice given by the arresting officer.
The evidence sufficiently established the fact that the Pacific Express Company was a corporation as alleged in the indictment. That fact could be, and was, established by proving the general reputation of the concern doing business in the locality. Brown v. State, 108 Ark. 336.
No error was committed and the judgment is, therefore, affirmed.