delivered the opinion of the ■court.
The state gave evidence to the effect that Matthews Taised the horses and turned them out on the range in "the spring of 1914; that he saw them at intervals between then and August of the following year; that on
“Why, Mr. McLennan evidenced a desire, of course, mentioned the case, and evidenced a desire to get it settled out of court if possible on account of its coming at his very busy time of the year, and there was nothing definite stated one way or the other. * * This-indictment having been brought up against Mr. Mc-Lennan, he wished to get it settled and over with if possible, and that is the reason it was mentioned tome. Of course, there was nothing definite said about it, except he wishes a settlement, if possible, out of court.”
The defendants’ counsel moved to strike out this-testimony. The court said:
“I will sustain the motion and strike that out. The-jury need not consider that.”
After some further parley between counsel and the-court the judge then said:
“I will withdraw that from the jury; they need not consider it.”
Among other things, the court instructed the jury thus:
“I charge you that, if you find from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants killed the horses in question for the purpose of concealment, you may consider the same as tending to: show the guilt of the defendants of the charge in the indictment”
- — to which instruction the defendants excepted. Some-of the witnesses who had from time to time butchered cattle, sheep and hogs were permitted to give their
1, 2. The defendant imputes error to the trial court in refusing to strike out the testimony of the witness Kirsh. This testimony was competent to show the acts of ownership exercised by Matthews over the animal mentioned from which the presumption might arise that it was his property. The declarations of Kirsh were also admissible to show that the property was afterward found in the possession of McLennan, because it was in his pasture with his brand upon it. It is referable to the doctrine of recent possession of stolen property being admissible as a circumstance to be considered in trial of a charge of larceny. The objection of the defendant ran rather to the weight than to the competence of the testimony. There was no error in refusing to withdraw it from the jury.
3. There are at least two reasons why the statement of Shattuck relating to his interview with the defendant was not admissible in evidence. In the first place, it does not impute to McLennan any utterance whatever. The witness said the defendant “evidenced a desire” to get the case settled, but does not say what act or speech there was which would amount to “evidence” in the judgment of the court.
4. Again, there is nothing inculpatory in wishing to get the ease settled. A fair trial would effectually “settle” the matter, and that is a constitutional right of the accused for the assertion of which he cannot be blamed.
5. The testimony of Shattuck, therefore, was not admissible, and the Circuit Court was right in withdrawing it from the jury. The court having done all it could in the matter, the question is whether the defendant’s rights were not abused beyond repair not
Adverting to the discussion of this point by Mr. Justice McBride in State v. Rader, 62 Or. 37, 40 (124 Pac. 195, 196), it is at least doubtful whether the fault was cured by striking out the evidence now under discussion. It is there said:
“While in some cases an express instruction to the jury to disregard testimony injuriously admitted is properly held to cure the error, yet the courts are cautious in the application of this rule. It is not an easy task to unring a bell, nor to remove from the mind an impression once firmly imprinted there, and the withdrawal of the testimony should be so emphatic as to leave no doubt in the mind of the juror as to the unequivocal repudiation by the court of the erroneously admitted matter, and even then, in a case where the testimony is evenly balanced or contradictory, courts hesitate to sanction such withdrawal, though it seems absolutely necessary to permit this course in some instances.”
The case is not like that of State v. Aiken, 41 Or. 294 (69 Pac. 683). There at the trial of one defendant the court admitted the statements of another jointly indicted, but not on trial, made after the homicide had been committed with which they were jointly charged. Without specifying the particular statement so as to directly call the attention of the jury to it, the court in the general charge said, in substance, that the jury must not consider any remark made by one of the defendants in the absence of the other after the homicide had been committed. In an opinion by Mr.
6. Complaint is made that the court permitted evidence to go to the jury indicating that the defendant had changed the brand on the animals and that he was concerned in the killing of them. It is claimed that this tends to prove distinct crimes, separate from the one mentioned in the indictment. In State v. O’Donnell, 36 Or. 222 (61 Pac. 892), Mr. Justice Moore summarized the exceptions to the general rule that evidence of crimes other than that charged in the-indictment is inadmissible. He wrote in part as follows :
“(1) If several similar criminal acts are so connected by the prisoner, with respect to time and locality, that they form an inseparable transaction, and a complete account of the offense charged in the indictment cannot be given without detailing the particulars of such other acts, evidence of any or all of the component parts thereof is admissible to prove the whole general plan. * * (3) If the facts and circumstances.Page 629tend to show that the prisoner committed an independent dissimilar crime, to enable him to perpetrate or to conceal an offense, snch evidence is admissible against him upon an indictment charging the auxiliary crime, when the intent to perpetrate or conceal such offense furnished the motive for committing the crime for which he is put upon trial.”
Within the meaning of the doctrine thus announced there was nothing in the testimony under discussion to take it from the jury. If the defendant stole the horses, it would be natural within human experience that he would change the brand upon them by putting on his own, or that, when detection appeared to be imminent, he would endeavor to hide the indicia of his crime by slaughtering the animals and disfiguring their bodies. All those things might be part of the general plan of the defendant. At least, the jury was entitled to consider them under proper instructions to that end.
7. Killing the horses might be equally attributable to one of three things: (1) To the commission of malicious mischief defined in Section 1969, L. O. L.; (2) to the desire to conceal an alteration of a brand defined by Section 1954; or (3) to the destruction of stolen property to aid in evading the consequences of the larceny. In any event its value as a circumstance in the case was equivocal. Under such conditions it was for the jury to determine whether it was applicable to support the charge of stealing. Where the evidence of the killing could be applied equally well to one of three possible conditions, the court in a measure intruded upon the prerogative of the jury by giving particular direction of this evidence toward one of those theories to the exclusion of others. The instruction quoted gave impetus to the evidence on that point toward proving a theft. The court cannot
“When the evidence leaves the case in such a situation that the jury will be required to speculate and guess which of several possible causes occasioned the injury, that part of the case should be withdrawn from their consideration.”
Here the court diverted the attention of the jury from other things to which the killing of the animals was properly referable, and pointedly told them that the circumstance of the killing, if proved, was to be considered as tending to show the guilt of the defendants of the charge of larceny. They were entitled to classify it as tending to show an independent crime disconnected from any larcenous intent which would be to the advantage of the defendant on his trial for theft. They were directed away from that favorable
In Shew v. New Tear Gold Mines Co., 31 Mont. 138 (77 Pac. 515), the court had under consideration a charge of negligence whereby the plaintiff was injured. The rule is thus stated in the opinion:
“The burden of proof is upon plaintiff, and is not satisfied if the conclusion to be reached from the testimony offered is merely a matter of conjecture. If such conclusion be equally consonant with the truth of the allegations, and with some other theory or theories inconsistent therewith, it becomes a mere conjecture, and the rule of the burden of proof is not satisfied. * * If the conclusion to be reached from the testimony is equally consonant with some theory inconsistent with either of the issues to be proven, it does not tend to prove them, within the meaning of the rule above announced. The use of the word ‘tend’ does not contemplate conjecture. It contemplates that the testimony has a tendency to prove the allegations of the complaint, and not some other theory inconsistent therewith.”
It is only where the testimony points to a definite conclusion and to no other that the court is authorized to say to the jury that it “tends” to prove anything. If the conclusion to be drawn from the circumstance in question is equivocal, it is for the jury alone to say what influence and what direction shall be accorded to the evidence on the point. What is here written on this point is not in conflict with State v. Brown, 28 Or. 147, 163 (41 Pac. 1042); Coos Bay R. R. Co. v. Siglin, 34 Or. 80, 84 (53 Pac. 504), and Smitson v. Southern Pacific Co., 37 Or. 74, 104 (60 Pac. 907), where it was decided, in substance, that under proper circumstances the court may say to the jury that there is testimony “tending to prove” certain things. In those cases the evidence, if believed, had no double
It is not deemed necessary to discuss whether more is shown than that the defendants merely had opportunity to hill the horses nor to determine whether the inhibition against founding a presumption upon an inference applied to the case in hand. Suffice it to say .that, if it was legally proved that the defendants hilled the horses, the jurors would be authorized to consider that fact in connection with other circumstances for what they might deem it to be worth in deciding upon the guilt or innocence of the accused.
8, 9. The fact that witnesses had butchered cattle, sheep or hogs did not necessarily qualify them to give an expert opinion about how long the horses had been dead. It is common knowledge, not requiring expert testimony, that a putrescent or desiccated carcass has been dead longer than one the flesh of which presents no indications of decay. Whether the body is stiff or relaxed, whether the gases of decomposition have distended it or not, the temperature and moisture prevalent at the time, as well as other factors, are phenomena to be considered in estimating how long a body probably has been dead: 1 Witthaus & Becker, Med. Jur. 923.
10,11. In the absence of any testimony about whether the witnesses on this point had made any systematic or extended observation of such things, their opinion about how long the horses had been dead ought not to have been admitted. In any event they should have described to the jury the appearances and indicia upon which they based their judgment; for, according to State v. Simonis, 39 Or. 111, 116 (65 Pac. 595), even an expert cannot give an opinion upon facts known to him and not communicated to the jury.
Reversed.