The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mason, J.:Russ Lewark was convicted of knowingly receiving a stolen Ford automobile, and appeals.
1. The section defining the offense (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 3465) covers the receiving of embezzled goods, and refers to the four preceding sections relating to embezzlement. The suggestion is made that it is intended to reach only cases where the original offense was perpetrated by one acting in a fiduciary capacity. We do not regard the statute as open to that interpretation. The information is also criticised because it.does not allege where the original theft was committed. Such an allegation is not necessary. (34'Cyc. 522.)
2. Policemen were permitted to testify that they went to the defendant’s garage to serve a search and seizure warrant issued under the prohibitory act, and that they there found two bottles of beer and two of wine, besides a number of empty bottles, and also the automobile alleged to have been stolen. It is objected that the testimony was irrelevant and was especially harmful because of public sentiment against violators of the laws relating to intoxicating liquor. It was not improper to show how the officers came to visit the defendant’s place.' The statements regarding the bottles do not appear to have been specifically attacked — if they had been, doubtless they would have been rejected or stricken out.
3. The officers were also allowed to testify that the engine number of the car had been changed; that the original figures had been filed off and new ones stamped over them; that parts of the old figures showed; and that one of them could be seen to have been a 3, an 8 or a 5. This testimony is objected to as embodying a conclusion or opinion, rather than a fact, and as not being the best evidence. It was permissible for the *186witnesses to give their judgment that the appearance of the number showed it to have been tampered with, for it was hardly practicable for them to describe in exact detail all the indications on which their belief was founded. They appear to have done this so far as could reasonably be expected. The rule that the omission to produce a writing must be satisfactorily explained before secondary evidence of its contents is admissible, does not apply in such a case, or at all events it applies no further than the trial court in its discretion may see fit to enforce it. (2 Wigmore on Evidence, §§ 1181, 1182.) The condition of the engine number played so important a part in the trial that an opportunity to inspect it was highly desirable. Its absence, however, was accounted for by testimony that one of the owners of the car had undertaken to drive it from Greensburg to the place of trial (Independence), but had left it at Wichita on account of the mud. There was nothing unreasonable about this story. Moreover, if the jury had been given an opportunity to examine the number, their determination of the question whether it was in the same condition as when the defendant received the car would necessarily have depended upon which witness they believed — upon the credence given to oral testimony.
4. The defendant asserts that there was no evidence that he knew the car had been stolen, or that he received it in Kansas. He gave this version of the transaction: He purchased the car. at two o’clock in the afternoon, just over the state line in South Coffeyville, Okla., of a stranger, who, however, was vouched for by an-acquaintance. He looked at the engine number, and it bore no evidence of having been tampered with SO' far as he could see. He paid $300 in currency for the car. He had an account in a Coffeyville bank, but not knowing how it stood at the time, he drove to the bank alone and drew out the money, bringing it back and turning it over to the seller, who drove the car to the defendant’s home in Coffeyville, Kan., the defendant accompanying him. He had been in the taxi and baggage business about six years, and at the time had five automobiles. He had had quite a little trouble with other stolen cars — one or two having been taken from him, so he looked at the engine numbers carefully. According *187to the state’s witnesses the alteration in the engine number showed plainly — the file marks were visible, and if a person would examine real closely he would find two or three little imprints of the old figures. The defendant told the officers that he had got the car in Coffeyville after night from a friend whose name he had forgotten.
We regard the evidence of the defendant’s contradictory statements, and of the condition of the engine number, in connection with his own story of the deal, and in view of his experience in automobile trading, as fairly warranting an inference that he knew he was acquiring a stolen machine. It was not necessary to a rightful conviction that the defendant should have been advised of the past history of the car — from whom and when and where the larceny had taken place (Clark & Marshall, Law of Crimes, 2d ed., p. 568), or that he should have had absolute knowledge of the theft. The test in the latter regard has been variously stated. It has been said that a belief is sufficient"(24 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 47) or even (although this may be regarded as an extreme expression) a reasonable suspicion (34 Cyc. 516). “He is required to use the circumspection usual with persons taking goods by private purchase.” (2 Wharton’s Criminal Law, 11th ed., § 1230.) Proof that the defendant received the property under such circumstances as would satisfy a main of ordinary intelligence and prudence that it had been stolen is held to justify a finding of guilty knowledge. (17 R. C. L. 86, 87.) We think the kind of knowledge referred to in the statute is sufficiently shown if from the facts known to the receiver he must have understood that he was acquiring stolen property, and acted upon that understanding.
The defendant’s own testimony indicated that the actual delivery of the car was made to him on the Kansas side of the line, and his insistence on the deal having been made in Oklahoma was open to some suspicion. The statement attributed to him, that he had got the car in Coffeyville, could reasonably be taken to refer to the Kansas town rather than to that in Oklahoma, which was spoken of as South Coffeyville. The evidence justified submitting to the jury the question whether the offense was committed in this state.
5. The contention is made that a variance resulted from *188proof that the car belonged to the Western Land Company, under an allegation that it was owned by three individuals. It was shown that the Western Land Company was a partnership composed of the persons named, so there was no inconsistency.
The judgment is affirmed.