State v. Winter
State v. Winter
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendants were convicted at the summer term of the Court of General Sessions for Richland county, under an indictment charging them with the larceny of “certain pieces of brass pertaining to engines and machinery, and certain tools and other appliances,” the property of the Southern Railway Company. Both defendants appealed, but, at the hearing, the appeal of M. Winter was abandoned.
The testimony tended to prove that four pieces, weighing in the aggregate four hundred and twenty pounds, which had been taken from the yards of the Southern Railway Company in Columbia, were found in a car on the Atlantic Coast Line track; that the car had been engaged by E. Winter, who was having it loaded with junk from his shop on Gervais street, in the city of Columbia; that the loading was done for the defendant E. Winter, by the defendant M. Winter and two negroes; that the stolen brass pieces were found at the bottom of the car, covered by other junk and old rags. Both the defendants swore on the trial that they knew nothing of the brass pieces; that they did not come from E. Winter’s shop, and that they were not aware that they were in the car until the officers and detectives found them there. The negro laborers also testified to their ignorance of the stolen property being in the car, but one of them admitted that on the promise of pay from an officer he immediately went to where the brass pieces were and found them.
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There is conflict of authority as to the weight to be given to the possession of the stolen goods as evidence of larceny. 4 Elliott on Evidence, Sec. 3058. But in this State the law is settled. In State v. Kinman, 7 Rich., 497, 503, the Court quotes with approval the rule as laid down in 2 East P. C., Sec. 93: “It may be laid down generally that whenever the property of one man, which has been taken from him without his knowledge or consent, is found upon another it is incumbent upon that other to -prove how he came by it; otherwise, the presumption is that he obtained it feloniously.” The force of the presumption was stated, in similar language in State v. Bennett, 3 Brev., 514, and State v. Garvin, 48 S. C., 258, 26 S. E., 570.
The jury is not required to look for the explanation which removes the presumption to direct evidence; it may'' be found in the attending circumstances or in the character or habits of the possessor or in any other fact. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, Sec. 34.
The instruction on this point, alleged to be erroneous, meant nothing more than that the law fastens guilt upon *157 the possessor of stolen goods, that is, it presumes him to he the thief, unless the jury finds in the whole case, as presented them, some satisfactory explanation of the possession consistent with the innocence of the accused.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Winter.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Evidence — Pbeeiminary Examination.. — The written statements of the magistrate of the evidence taken at a preliminary examination is the best evidence of what the accused swore to there. 2. Exception.. — That one accused of crime testifies on the trial to facts admitted in parol as testified to at preliminary examination renders exception on that point unavailing. 3. Larceny. — Charge here excepted to means nothing more than the law presumes one found in possession of stolen goods to be the thief unless the jury find in the whole case some satisfactory explanation of the possession consistent with his innocence. 4. Ibid. — Evidence that like brasses to those found had been stolen from a railway company, that those found were marked with the company’s name, that they were more valuable for railroad purposes than for junk, that defendant’s only explanation of there being in his possession was he did not know they were in the car he was loading with junk, was sufficient for jury to infer he came by them feloniously.