— The defendant was indicted and ■convicted for stealing a quantity of lead ore of value less than thirty dollars. The indictment was manifestly based on section 1318, Revised Statutes, which declares, that: “ Every person who shall steal, take, or carry away any money, or personal property, or effects of another, under the value of thirty dollars, not being the subject of .grand larceny without regard to value, shall be deemed .guilty of petit larceny,” etc.
The indictment charges, substantially, that defend■dant, on the- day of June, 1882, at the county of Jasper, unlawfully stole, took, and carried away two thousand pounds of lead ore, of the value of twenty-four ■dollars, the property of the Granby Mining and Smelting Company, a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Missouri, etc.
*303I. To constitute the offence charged, it devolved upon the state to maintain by proof three propositions : first, the taking and carrying away of the property by the defendant; second, that the thing so taken was the personal property of another, and of some value ; and, third, that defendant took it with the fraudulent purpose to deprive such owner of his ownership therein, and to wrongfully appropriate the same.
There is no question made as to the taking and carrying away, as the defendant admits that he loaded the •ore into his wagon at- Granby, in Newton county, and hauled it to Joplin, in' Jasper county, where he was found in possession of it and arrested. The state’s evidence tended to show that the Granby Mining and Smelting Company was a corporation at the time, engaged in mining and smelting lead ore at the town of Granby and elsewhere; that it owned and controlled large bodies of land in and about Granby, containing such mineral, •contributory to its business. A brief summary of the state’s evidence, bearing on the question of ownership, will more satisfactorily present the strength of the state’s case. Kingston, the superintendent of the works at Granby, testified that the wash place, from which defendant took the mineral in question, was what is known .as the Philadelphia Company mining land, the same being land owned and controlled by the Granby Mining and Smelting Company; that defendant washed the mineral from what is known as tailings, from which the mineral had mainly been washed years before by the company; that the mineral was mined principally on the lands of the Granby company, and that the land from which the defendant took the mineral or tailings was leased in 1872 by the Granby company for two years, -and afterwards purchased by it, and that the same was in the possession and under the control of the Granby company continuously up to the time of the asportation in question.
Green testified that he was at the time in question cashier of the Granby company, and that the mineral *304taken had been washed from tailings on the Granby companys land; the mineral was the property of the Granby company.
Bailey testified that on the night of the taking of the mineral by the defendant, he was sent by the Granby company in pursuit of the defendant; that when he came up with him in Joplin, he said to him : “My boy, I’ve got you.” Defendant replied: “I don’t know. It’s all Granby mineral. I’d just as well turn it in here as at Granby.”
Peter E. Blow testified, that he was the general manager of the Granby company; that he was present at the arrest of defendant in Joplin, and said to him: “ We have caught you this time.” Whereat, defendant said it was Granby mineral, .and proposed “to fix the matter up,” and turn the mineral into the Joplin furnace, controlled by Blow for the Granby company.
Certainly this was ample evidence to go to the jury,, and to warrant them in finding the ownership of the property in the Granby company.
The defendant, while admitting the taking and carrying away, claimed and his proof tended to show, that he had not been mining for the Granby company for more than two years theretofore, and that he had bought the wash place, with its appliances, in 1876, from one Warden, and that most of the tailings, from which the mineral came, was from land owned by one Davis.
It is manifest, however, from defendant’s own witnesses, that it was not claimed that all the tailings at this wash came from the Davis land. If, therefore, the jury had given full credit to defendant’s evidence, it still left in question the ownership of a part of the tailings from which the property in dispute came. Defendant’s testimony and evidence made no pretense that he made any inquiry as to the residue of the tailings, or even asked for permission to wash and remove indiscriminately from the pile.
The question of ownership was quite fairly submitted *305by the instructions of the court; and we will not interfere with the province of the jury to determine its probative force, and the credibility of the witnesses.
Third, as to the fraudulent intent with which the defendant acted, it was quite fairly submitted to the jury. The court instructed them, that if they believe from the evidence that defendant bought the wash place and tailings from which the mineral came, or that he carried the mineral away, believing that he was entitled to the same, they should find him not guilty.
The proof of defendant’s guilty knowledge and evil purpose was strong. He secretly loaded- the mineral into his wagon at night, and moved off with it between twelve and one o’clock in the night. He was guilty of misrepresentation as to where the mineral came from while trying to sell it in Joplin next morning; and when overtaken by the agents of the Granby company, he virtually admitted his wrong, by trying “tofix” the matter up, and proposing to turn the property over to the owner.
It is useless to discuss other provisions of the statute, to which our attention is called, under which the defendant might have been indicted. Appellant insists that he was indicted under the section of the statute first above quoted, and the proof sustains the charge.
II. Appellant complains of the action of the trial court in rejecting certain evidence offered by him. We have given this objection due consideration, and are unable to see that the action of the court could have worked any possible injury to defendant. The rejected proof was either Incompetent or irrelevant.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Ellison, J., concurs; Hall, J., absent.