State v. Tomlinson

Decision Date07 February 1944
Docket Number38706
Citation177 S.W.2d 493,352 Mo. 391
PartiesState v. John Tomlinson, Appellant
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Appeal from Adair Circuit Court; Hon. Noah Simpson, Judge.

Affirmed.

Phillip J. Fowler, Gray Snyder and Fuller, Fuller & Ely for appellant.

(1) This court no longer recognizes any presumption of guilt arising from the unexplained and exclusive possession of stolen property by the defendant immediately after the larceny. State v. Deckard, 37 S.W.2d 414; State v. Duncan, 50 S.W.2d 1021. (2) While it is true that unexplained and exclusive possession of stolen property by the defendant immediately after the theft, is admissible evidence to go to the jury, such evidence alone is not sufficient to warrant a conviction; and if at the very time that the possession of the property by the defendant is discovered, he offers a reasonable explanation of how he obtained it, which is as consistent with his innocence as with his guilt, and there is no other evidence of guilt, the State is not entitled to go to the jury. State v. Duncan supra; State v. Marquardson, 7 Idaho, 352, 62 P 1034; McMahon v. People, 120 Ill. 581, 11 N.E. 883; Foresythe v. State, 20 S.W. 371.

Roy McKittrick, Attorney General, and L. I. Morris Assistant Attorney General, for respondent.

(1) The court did not err in overruling defendant's oral demurrer offered immediately after prosecuting attorney's opening statement. Secs. 4070, 4125, R.S. 1939; State v. Loeb, 190 S.W. 299; State v. Jackson, 16 S.W. 829, 105 Mo. 196; State v. Posey, 152 S.W.2d 34, 347 Mo. 1088; State v. Nasello, 30 S.W.2d 132, 325 Mo. 442; State v. Cooper, 271 S.W. 471; State v. Neely, 56 S.W. 264; State v. McKeever, 101 S.W.2d 22, 339 Mo. 1006; State v. Eason, 18 S.W.2d 71, 322 Mo. 1239; State v. Painter, 44 S.W.2d 79, 329 Mo. 314; State v. Sherry, 64 S.W.2d 238; State v. Casteel, 64 S.W.2d 286. (2) It was not error for the court to refuse to direct a verdict as requested by defendant, at close of all the evidence in the case. State v. Vinton, 119 S.W. 370, 220 Mo. 90, l.c. 100; State v. Hefton, 213 S.W. 442; State v. English, 274 S.W. 470, l.c. 471, 308 Mo. 695; State v. Perkins, 116 S.W.2d 80, 342 Mo. 560; 16 C.J., p. 722, secs. 1579, 1580; State v. Fitzsimmons, 89 S.W.2d 670; State v. Bennett, 87 S.W.2d 159; State v. Kaufman, 46 S.W.2d 843. (3) Evidence in the case was sufficient to submit the case to the jury and to sustain a conviction of grand larceny. Sec. 4456, R.S. 1939; State v. Hodges, 295 S.W. 575. (4) The verdict in this case is sufficient and is responsive to the charge. Sec. 4456, R.S. 1939; State v. Hodges, 237 S.W. 1000; State v. Akins, 242 S.W. 660; State v. Haberston, 51 S.W.2d 553, 330 Mo. 799; State v. Hodges, 234 S.W. 790; State v. Batey, 67 S.W.2d 450; State v. Bishop, 231 Mo. 411, 133 S.W. 33; State v. Lovett, 147 S.W. 484, 243 Mo. 510.

OPINION

Tipton, J.

An information was filed in the circuit court of Lewis County, Missouri, charging the appellant with larceny of a certain blue-roan cow belonging to one Vadie Baker, which was valued at seventy-five dollars. On a change of venue, the case was sent to the circuit court of Adair County, Missouri, where the appellant was found guilty as charged and his punishment assessed at two years in the State penitentiary.

Is the evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict? That is the only question presented by the appellant. We will adopt the statement of facts from the appellant's brief without quotation marks. It is as follows:

Vadie Baker, the prosecuting witness in the case, is a colored man who owns a very large farm situated on the highway between Monticello and Lewistown in Lewis County. His home is on the north side of the highway, and he has certain cattle pens located on the same side of the highway and closely adjacent to his home, which are reached by a driveway which passes directly by the house. He also has a pasture, mentioned in the evidence, in this state, located on the south side of the highway. Baker is a cattle trader, dealing in large numbers of cattle at all times.

Tomlinson, the defendant, is a white man, also a farmer in Lewis County, and he lives and has his farm about a mile and a half southeast of Baker's place. However, to go from the Baker place to the Tomlinson place by road, it is necessary either to go through Monticello or to take another road to the south and west; either road being several miles long.

Sometime before the 7th day of May, 1942, Baker had purchased certain cattle from a man in Adair County. Among others, was the cow here in question, a cross between a short horn and a poled angus which produced what is colloquially known among farmers as a blue-roan. She weighed about a thousand pounds. On the afternoon of the 7th of May, Baker had this cow, with a number of black angus cows, in the pens near his house. He is not definite as to whether the total number of cattle in the group was 20 or 21, but he says he knew at the time the exact number. On the afternoon of the 7th he showed these cattle to one Delmar Smith, a white man who resides at Lewistown. Smith was not then ready to buy, but suggested that he keep the cattle in the pen over night and that he would let him know further in the morning. The next morning Baker directed his hired hands to take the cattle across the road to the south pasture. He did not have occasion to see them again or count them until Saturday, the 9th of May, two days after he had shown them to Smith. At that time he noticed that the blue-roan cow was gone. Neither of the hired hands who had charge of taking the cattle across the road testified.

On May 8th, one Givens Stephenson had occasion to go from his home to a distant field located in the same general neighborhood as the Tomlinson place. That morning he saw a blue-roan cow tied to a tree in some woods near the South Fabius River. The place where he saw the cow was not on the Tomlinson land, and, in fact, was across the Fabius from the Tomlinson place. Givens Stephenson did not purport to identify this as the same cow which Baker had lost. He described it only as a blue-roan cow. He said that the ground around the place where the cow was standing, for some distance was trampled down. If the cow tied at that point were a very nervous animal, she could have so trampled the ground in a comparatively short time, but unless she were very nervous, the indications were that she had been there some time.

In this connection it is to be noted that the family of Baker had been home in their house all during the night of May 7th and the morning of May 8th; that on May 9th, when Baker noticed that the cow was gone, he and Sheriff Alex Stephenson of Lewis County, made a careful examination of the ground around the gates leading to the cattle pen in which the cattle had been kept on the night of the 7th and found no signs of anyone having driven in or out of these gates. The ground, however, was hard.

One Elmer Smith testified for the State that he saw a blue-roan cow in the defendant's pasture, that this cow got through the fence into his oat field and he warned the defendant to take her away. He says that this was on a Saturday, and he guessed that it was on May 9th. The witness had had considerable trouble with the defendant over a period of time about cattle getting back and forth through a fence which was apparently in none too good repair. He admitted that he had a very considerable feeling against the defendant. Something over a month later, on June 20th, [As we read this record the date was May 20th] some of the defendant's cattle again got on to Elmer Smith's land, and he caused Attorney Walter Hilbert to prepare a notice to serve on the defendant that he would shut up the cattle and hold them for damages. Sheriff Alex Stephenson, who, in the...

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5 cases
  • State v. Denison
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • March 6, 1944
    ... ... possession of the stolen adding machine and typewriter two ... months after the larceny was too remote to permit of the ... application of the rule stated in the third preceding ... paragraph. In a very recent decision, State v. Tomlinson, ... No. 38706, 352 Mo. 391, 177 S.W.2d 493, we stated that ... the Duncan case, supra, was not in harmony with our other ... decisions based on similar facts. And State v. Jenkins ... (Mo. Div. 2), 213 S.W. 796, 799(9), ruled: "What is ... meant by 'recent possession' is to be determined ... ...
  • State v. Martin
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • February 9, 1948
    ... ... be in exclusive possession of the rings a few hours after ... they were missing, and his unconvincing and conficting ... explanations of how they came to be in his sock, were enough ... to take the case to the jury on the issue of larceny by him ... State v. Tomlinson, 352 Mo. 391, 395(1, 2), 177 ... S.W.2d 493, 494(1, 2); State v. Denison, 352 Mo ... 572, 577(2), 178 S.W.2d 449, 452(3) ...          Another ... assignment in appellant's brief asserts the State's ... main instruction No. 1 ... [208 S.W.2d 209] ... misdirected the jury in ... ...
  • State v. Harper
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • January 2, 1945
    ... ... given respecting an accused's acquisition of possession ... State v. Nichols (Mo.), 130 S.W. 2d 485, 486[1, 3, ... 5]; State v. Nicoletti, 344 Mo. 86, 91[1], 125 S.W ... 2d 33, 35 ... [184 S.W.2d 603] ... ; State v. Tomlinson, 352 Mo. 391, 177 S.W. 2d 493, ... 494[1, 2] (overruling State v. Duncan, 330 Mo. 656, ... 50 S.W. 2d 1021); State v. Kennon (Mo.), 123 S.W. 2d ... 46, 47[2-5]; State v. Slusher, 301 Mo. 285, 290(I), ... 256 S.W. 817, 818[1] ...          New ... trial: Former jeopardy: Waiver. The ... ...
  • State v. Schleicher, 54439
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • October 12, 1970
    ...recently stolen property is one of fact which the jury may draw. State v. Sallee, Mo.Sup., 436 S.W.2d 246, 250(3); State v. Tomlinson, 352 Mo. 391, 177 S.W.2d 493, 494(1), (2). Therefore, the question presented in each case is basically a factual one. Prior cases are not particularly helpfu......
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