Citation Numbers: 42 Kan. 448
Judges: Holt
Filed Date: 7/15/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/8/2022
Opinion by
On the 29th day of December, 1888, in the Montgomery district court, G. C. Jackson, the defendant, was convicted of obtaining money under false pretenses, and was sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for four years. From that judgment he appeals to this court. The only question we can consider under the record, is whether such verdict aud sentence were supported by sufficient evidence.
In the summer and fall of 1887, G. C. Jackson, J. C. Price and Daniel Wilson owned about 380 or 390 head of yearling steers, kept at Hayden’s ranch, on Lightning creek in the Indian Territory. About the middle of November, 1887, the defendant, Jackson, entered into some negotiations looking to the sale of his interest in the cattle to Daniel Sanders, a colored man living in the territory, and at that time went with him and showed him 175 or 180 head of them. There was no def
Jackson stated at the time of the sale that the cattle were in the Indian Territory; that they might be a little scattered, but were all there; that four or five of them might have died, out of the original herd, but at least 383 head were in the territory belonging to them. Sanders and Bridges found after search and investigation only about 50 head of steers, and a part of those were claimed at first by Harrison, Turner and
It appears in evidence that on the 20th of November, 1887, twelve days before the conditional sale to Sanders and Funk, and nineteen days before the sale to Sanders upon which the money was paid, 202 head of cattle bearing the same description as the cattle owned by Jackson, Price and Wilson were driven from Hayden’s ranch, in the Indian Territory, to Montgomery county, Kansas, and there shipped to Kansas City, Missouri, and sold. They were shipped in the name of Harry Still and Henry Clay; they were really shipped by Harrison Turner and Henry C. Hayden, but in the deposition introduced at the trial, Turner stated that his name was Harry Still, although he was known as Harrison Turner, and Hayden stated that his real name was Henry Clay, but that he was often called Henry C. Hayden.
We think this shipment was with the knowledge at least, of the defendant Jackson. James Thornton testified that on the 20th of November, 1887, that Hayden, Still, Jackson the defendant, Price, three colored boys and himself, went to the Indian Territory and cut out of the herd of cattle belonging to Jackson, Price and Wilson 202 head of steers and drove them to the railroad; they drove first to Russell creek and then to Chetopa, thence back to Russell creek, where they were put on the cars and billed for Kansas City. He testified that he knew the Jackson, Price and Wilson cattle, and these were cut out of that herd, and only 50 head left on the ranch. Pie stated that at the time he was at work for Jackson, and went with the cattle from Chetopa to Kansas City.
This was the substance of the testimony upon which the verdict of guilty was found. To be sure there was the deposition of Still and Hayden, taken in the Indian Territory, that the cattle shipped at that time were their own cattle, and not the property of Jackson, Price and Wilson at all; but we are fully satisfied from all the evidence in the case, that the 202 head of steers shipped to Kansas City were the cattle that belonged at that time to Jackson, Price and Wilson, and that
After a consideration of all the testimony, we believe that the verdict was amply sustained by the evidence, and recommend that the judgment be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.