There was no error in refusing to set aside the verdict on the affidavit of the nine jurors of the panel that found it. They do not say that-it fails to express their finding precisely upon the matter entrusted to their decision, viz., the larceny of the horse; but simply that the grade of the offense, and its punishment, are greater than they had supposed; so much so indeed, *412that had they been advised of it, they would not have found him guilty.
With the punishment of the accused the jury had nothing to do. That was a matter exclusively within the province of the judge, within certain statutory bounds. Their duty was simply to pass upon the facts charged in the indictment, and whether the punishment to follow in case of conviction was in the penitentiary or only in the county jail, was a matter that could have no legitimate bearing upon the question of guilty or not guilty, which they were to answer. The rules of evidence and all the presumptions of law were the same, whether the punishment was more or less severe.
The purport of the affidavit is, that these jurors believed the prisoner stole the horse, but that they supposed the offense to amount only to petit larceny if the value of the animal stolen were returned by them as being less than thirty-five dollars, which they did without a particle of evidence to support them in it. Indeed, to use their own language, “they did not intend to convict the said Thomas J. Wells of a felony, but that they intended to convict him of petit larceny only,” and that they “were of the opinion that the said defendant was not guilty of a greater crime than petit larceny.” Their mistake, therefore, as before stated, was not in any act of their own — not in any expression of the verdict — but in their supposition that in horse-stealing the same distinction of grand and petit larceny exists as in the theft of other species of property. But no such distinction is known to our law, and the character of the crime is the same, whether the value of the animal be five hundred or only twenty dollars. No case has been cited, and we think none can be found in which a verdict has been set aside on such grounds.
*413The second error relied on is the refusal of the court to admit in evidence a chattel mortgage of the horse alleged to have been stolen, executed by the prisoner while he was the acknowledged owner, to one John Barsby. The indictment charged that the horse when stolen was the property of James W. Eller and Julius O. Chase. There was testimony introduced by the state which, uneontradicted, would justify the conclusion that this was true; but taking into consideration the evidence offered on behalf of the prisoner, this allegation of ownership, as to Chase, at least, was placed in some doubt as to its correctness. Eller and Chase both swore that the latter was half owner with the former; while Chase swore that his half interest was obtained by the surrender of a mortgage on the horse given him by Wells; while Wells for himself testified, in effect, that the surrender of this mortgage was not in consideration of Chase receiving an interest in the horse, but on account of certain collaterals and securities placed in his hands, and which he then had. That on surrendering the mortgage, Chase said “ he had nothing to do with the horse,” that “he had enough collaterals and other securities for the horse. He said he had a few dollars in it; but I think he said he would throw that off.” This testimony of the prisoner, as to what Chase said to him, , stands before us uncontradieted; and it at least tends to show that in September, 1880, when Wells took the horse, Chase had no interest in him whatever.
The tendency of the mortgage or bill of sale to Bars-by, which was given in May, 1879, and antedated the somewhat questionable sale by Wells to Eller, tended to show ownership in the horse adverse to that charged in the indictment, and we think should have been submitted to the jury for that purpose, together with the other evidence bearing on that point. The question *414of ownership was material, and all testimony tending to throw light upon it was certainly admissible.
There was no error in the refusal to charge upon the question of the prisoner’s sanity. There was no evidence tending at all to show him not of sound mind at the time of the alleged offense, nor indeed at any other time. The refusal to instruct, when there is no evidence to which the instruction requested could ppssibly apply, is not error. Neither was it error for the judge merely to, omit' to instruct generally upon the law of the case. It is possible if a request to this effect had been made, to the judge, that a refusal would have been erroneous. There are authorities that so hold; but as there was no request in this case, the question is not properly before us for decision.
Eor the error committed in the rejection of the chattel mortgage, the judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded. »
Reversed and remanded.