Harris v. State
Harris v. State
Opinion of the Court
The defendant was convicted of the larceny of a cow and calf, the personal property of W. S. Kelley. The evidence shows that defendant owned and occupied a plantation in Pike cpunty adjoining the plantation occupied by Kelley, that the defendant was engaged in buying cattle, and that such cattle as he bought were marked and branded by him and turned on his plantation in Pike county to pasture through the winter months, and in the spring they were removed to another plantation in, Montgomery county, some 12 or 13 miles from the Pike county plantation.
The cow in question was a milch cow, and was allowed to pasture on the plantation occupied by Kelley, with other cattle belonging to Kelley, and the evidence tends to show both the cow and calf were branded on the right jaw with the letter K during the previous fall (the alleged larceny having occurred during the latter part of February, 1917), and were otherwise unmarked.
After the cow and calf were missed by Kelley, he began to search for them, and after several days found them on defendant’s plantation in Montgomery county. The evidence offered by the state tended to show that the cow and calf had been freshly re-branded with the letter H over the K; that a portion of the horng of both the cow and calf had been sawed off; that the bush of the cow’s tail had been cut out; and that both had been freshly marked in the de *14 fendant’s mark. It was further shown that the cow and calf were driven by the defendant, with a lot of other cattle, from defendant’s plantation in Pike county and turned on the pasture in Montgomery county, where they were found by Kelley.
After careful consideration of the evidence, we are not convinced that the trial court was in error in refusing a new trial.
There is no error in the record.
Affirmed.
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