From a house situated on the Pitch Fork ranch in Dickens County, which was in possession of the ranch foreman, Lambert, there was taken, about the 25th of November, 1925, certain household furniture, including two bedsteads, two mattresses, two rocking chairs, two cane chairs, two bedsprings, and a six-burner oil stove.
According to the witness Roy Scott, who resided at Munday, Texas, on or about the 25th of November, 1925, at about 11 o'clock at night, the appellant Busby and one Wilcoxson came to the home of Scott and brought with them articles of the description of those mentioned above, which they sold to the witness for the sum of $73.00. According to the witness, his house was subsequently visited by Officers Rice and Billingsley, and the articles which he had acquired from the appellant and Wilcoxson were exhibited to and examined by Rice and Billingsley. The appellant was not present at the time of the examination. Scott delivered to Rice the property which he had previously received from the appellant and Wilcoxson. According to Scott, at a time previous to the delivery of the property, the appellant and Wilcoxson told him that they had a store in Vernon and would bring him the property and sell it to him at one-half of its original price. He also said that he had previously made trades with the appellant and Wilcoxson and was told at the time that they had a store at Vernon and could sell and deliver to him sugar at a very low price; that about two weeks before buying the furniture he had purchased some casings from them.
Rice, a constable, testified that about the 25th of November, 1925, he, in company with Billingsley, visited the home of Roy Scott and there found some furniture which the witness described and enumerated, stating that there were two rocking chairs, two straight-back chairs, two iron bedsteads, two mattresses, and a Red Star six-burner oil stove.
Billingsley gave testimony similar to that of Rice.
Edwards testified that he was an employe of Lambert; that he received from John Rice some furniture, that is, two beds, two mattresses, two rocking chairs, two straight chairs, and a Red Star six-burner oil stove; that he conveyed these articles to the Pitch Fork ranch and placed them in the house under the control of Lambert. The house upon the ranch had been occupied by a man named Harrold, who had vacated the premises and left his property situated in the house in charge of Lambert. The witness Camel testified that he sold to Mike Michael, for *Page 298 whom Harrold was working, two beds, two rockers, two straight chairs, mattresses, springs, and a six-burner oil stove.
Lambert testified that the property stolen was brought back into the house from which it had been taken; that it was delivered to him at the ranch by Luther Edwards.
Appellant complains of the receipt in evidence of the testimony of Lambert as follows:
"The property that was stolen at this time is back in the house that it was stolen from. We got it at Munday, Texas. Luther Edwards delivered it there."
And that of Scott as follows:
"I turned the furniture, the furniture that I purchased from the defendant, over to Mr. Rice."
Also that of Rice, as follows:
"I turned the furniture over to Luther Edwards."
As stated in the original opinion, the bills of exceptions mentioned are so meager in reciting the setting in which the testimony complained of was received and its relation to the case as to render their sufficiency to demand consideration doubtful.
Upon the merits of the legal question presented we make the following observations: It is a sound rule that in the absence of other evidence of ownership, that fact cannot be proved by testimony of a witness as to the "ex parte" identification of the property by the owner out of the presence and hearing of the accused. See Anderson v. State, 14 Tex.Crim. App. 49; Cannada v. State, 29 Tex.Crim. App. 537; Spears v. State,91 Tex. Crim. 55; Underhill's Crim. Ev., 3rd Ed., Sec. 465. One who testifies from personal knowledge to the identity of property found in the possession of the accused with that which was stolen is not understood as giving an opinion offensive to the rules of evidence. His statement is one of fact. It may be untrue or he may be mistaken, but the statement is not to be classified as an objectionable opinion. See Underhill's Crim. Ev., 3rd Ed., Sec. 464, notes 66; also Berry v. State, 87 Tex. Crim. 559. The law did not forbid the tracing of the property by the testimony of several witnesses who handled it after it came into possession of Scott.
According to his testimony, Scott received certain property from the appellant and Wilcoxson.
The circumstances relied upon by the state was the possession of the stolen property. Lambert, the owner, did not see the property in the possession of the appellant, but after it was missed, he first saw it in the possession of Edwards, who had received it from Scott. It would seem, therefore, that applying *Page 299 the liberal rule with reference to the introduction of testimony in a circumstantial evidence case, that the testimony of Lambert to the effect that he had examined the property delivered to him by Edwards and that it was the same property that had previously been in his possession, was competent. Preston v. State, 8 Tex.Crim. App. 30; Vernon's Tex.Crim. Stats., Vol. 2 (1916), p. 596.
We are referred to Uhl v. State, 289 S.W. 404, as thought to be in conflict with the above conclusion. When the point in the Uhl case upon which reversal was based is understood it will be apparent that no conflict exists and that the question there being considered was entirely different from the one here involved. In that case evidence was admitted, over objection, as to finding on defendant's premises a Dodge touring car and also a Dodge coupe, and also proof of the return of them to their reputed owners. Neither of these cars was the one defendant was being prosecuted for having received, and proof as to them threw no light on the transaction under investigation. Its harmful result was to impress the jury that defendant was a receiver of stolen property generally. The judgment was reversed for the erroneous reception of this evidence. In the present case the identical property claimed to have been stolen was being traced.
Lambert was foreman of the Pitch Fork ranch and in charge thereof. One Harrold and his wife, at one time, occupied one of the houses situated on the ranch. While there, Harrold was at work on an oil well. Some months before the offense was committed, Harrold ceased working there and he and his wife departed. Harrold told Lambert not to let anyone molest the property which was in the house. Lambert did not have a key to the house but looked in at the contents occasionally. Lambert being in possession and control of the ranch on which the house was situated, was, within the meaning of the law, the owner. The circumstances detailed sufficiently show that Harrold had left the premises and left the personal property in charge of Lambert. No one save Harrold had a right to remove the property without the consent of Lambert, who was the sole person in possession. The statute reads thus:
"To constitute theft it is not necessary that the possession and ownership of the property be in the same person at the time of taking." (Art. 1414, P. C., 1925.)
"Possession of the person so unlawfully deprived of property is constituted by the exercise of actual control, care and management of the property, whether the same be lawful or not." (Art. 1415, P. C., 1925.) *Page 300
The annotations in Vernon's Tex. P. C., 1925, Vol. 3, p. 175, illustrate the interpretation of the statute and support the ruling in the original opinion to the effect that the ownership in Lambert was proved. See Frazier v. State, 18 Tex.Crim. App. 434; Vanderhider v. State, 98 Tex.Crim. Rep..
Appellant renews his insistence that the value of the property in the county where the theft occurred is not sufficiently proven and cites Williams v. State, 288 S.W. 1090, in support of his contention. In that case, over objection, a witness was permitted to testify what the stolen property was worth and what it would cost to buy it, without having stated that such was its market value, or without having shown that it had no market value. In the present case, without objection, Lambert testified as follows:
"As to whether or not there is any market for second-hand furniture on the Pitch Fork ranch, will say, I don't think so, I haven't heard of it. That stuff was taken from the house at that time, was in good condition. It was practically new, it had only been there for five or six months. The mattresses I should say would be worth about seven or eight dollars. As to whether or not I know the market value of these goods, will say that I don't know exactly what they were worth; I never did buy any furniture. I know approximately, that is to my best judgment, what the market value of these goods would be."
After this qualifying testimony the witness was permitted, still without objection, to testify as to the value of each of the stolen articles. In this state of the record we think appellant's contention that the value of the property at the place of taking was not shown cannot be sustained.
Our re-examination of the record in the light of the motion for rehearing leads us to the conclusion that the motion should be overruled. It is so ordered.
Overruled.