DocketNumber: No. 3934.
Citation Numbers: 107 S.W. 331, 52 Tex. Crim. 309, 1907 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 335
Judges: Brooks
Filed Date: 12/18/1907
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
—Appellant was convicted for theft of a hog, and his punishment assessed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.
The first ground of the motion for a new trial complains that the court committed material error, calculated to injure the rights of the defendant in this, to wit: “The evidence shows that the defendant took *310 the alleged stolen hog in his possession on the range and immediately after defacing the mark thereof turned it loose on the range, thereby returning said alleged stolen property to the owner thereof within a reasonable time and before any prosecution was commenced therefor. And the evidence further- shows that when defendant’s right to said 1 alleged stolen property was first questioned, the same was in the actual \ possession of the owner thereof, and he immediately surrendered the right of possession to said owner voluntarily within a reasonable time and before any prosecution was commenced therefor, and the court failed ■ to charge upon the voluntary return of stolen property.” The facts in this case show that prosecuting witness and appellant lived within a mile or so of each other, each owning hogs. Appellant had bought some hogs, among which was a black and white spotted sow, as he insisted, very similar to the sow of the prosecuting witness. One day while out hunting hogs appellant caught prosecuting witness’ sow and changed the , mark thereon into his own mark. Prosecuting witness’ hog was also a black and white spotted sow. Subsequent to the marking of the hog prosecuting rvitness found her sow and took it up, and subsequent to taking same up appellant was notified of the fact, and thereupon stated . -that if he had taken prosecuting witness’ hog it -was by mistake and he l; did not want it, and for the prosecuting witness to keep the hog. Appellant hired a couple of the prosecuting witnesses who saw him mark Mary Jackson’s (the prosecutrix) hog to leave the county, giving them some money for that purpose.' They subsequently returned, however, and testified in this case. When appellant marked the prosecuting wit- | ness’ hog upon the range and turned it loose, he thereby asserted pos- ¡ session over the hog, which, under the law of this State, constitutes theft, and the sheer fact of turning it loose on the range would not be a voluntary return of the hog such as authorized the court to charge thereon. Appellant showed criminal intent and felonious purpose to appropriate said hog to his own use and benefit the moment that he marked same, and his only defense was a mistake of fact. This the court properly charged on, and to which charge appellant urges no objection. The case did not raise the issue above complained of, and the court did not err in not so charging.
The'evidence amply supports the verdict, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Henderson, Judge, absent.
[Motion for- rehearing overruled, January 15, 1908, without written opinion.—Reporter.]