Little v. State
Decision Date | 21 June 1915 |
Docket Number | (No. 59.) |
Citation | 178 S.W. 374 |
Parties | LITTLE v. STATE. |
Court | Arkansas Supreme Court |
Appeal from Sebastian Circuit Court; John H. Holland, Special Judge.
Jesse Little was convicted of petit larceny, and he appeals.Reversed and remanded.
Appellant was indicted, charged with the crime of stealing a cultivator, the property of Olin T. Brewer, alleged to be of the value of $15.The indictment was in correct form.He was convicted of the crime of petit larceny, and prosecutes this appeal.The proof on behalf of the state tended to show that one Brewer owned the cultivator and had owned the same for about six years.He left the cultivator at the place where he had formerly been in the mercantile business, standing out against the yard fence on a vacant lot.It was in good condition when he got it; had never been used; he had not sold the cultivator.He went to get a repair off of the same, and it was gone.He saw Jesse Little and said to him:
"Jesse, I understand that you got my cultivator, and I want you to bring it back home."
Jesse told the witness that he wanted the wheels to make a wheelbarrow to haul fertilizer into the garden.The cultivator was taken in the daytime.This witness was asked the following question:
— and answered, "I don't remember."Many witnesses were introduced, testifying both on behalf of the state and the defendant, whose testimony was to the effect that the appellant, about 2 or 3 o'clock in the afternoon, took the cultivator off of the vacant lot where it was situated; that he carried it out in the middle of the street and fastened it to his father's wagon.While he was doing this, several parties were standing on the street laughing and teasing him about the cultivator.Witnesses testified that it was an old cultivator, and that several of its pieces were missing.One witness said that it had a tongue and a neck yoke.Another said that it had a tongue, and he could not remember whether it had any other pieces or not.Another said it was an old piece of cultivator.One of the witnesses stated that the appellant stated, in reply to a party who spoke to him about the cultivator, that he"was going to take the wheels to make a wagon to haul manure into the garden."Appellant offered to prove by his brother that prior to the taking of the cultivator he(appellant) requested his brother to see Mr. Brewer, the owner of the cultivator, and to ask him about the matter; that his brother did see Brewer, who told him "to take the cultivator, or any part of it, and do whatever he wanted to do with it."And that his brother told him (appellant) what Brewer had said.The court ruled that any conversation between Brewer and the brother of appellant concerning the taking of the cultivator was competent, but that it was not competent to prove that the brother afterwards communicated to appellant that Brewer had given him permission to take the cultivator; that such testimony was hearsay.Appell...
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