Case ID: shan-cas_1/html/0077-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "\n      Carutiiers, J.,", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

JOHN M. SHAW v. THE STATE.
    (S. C., Thomp. Cas., 134-135.)
    Knoxville,
    September Term, 1858.
    LARCENY. Possession of stolen goods, evidence. Evidence of possession of stolen g-oods without regard to the
    lapse of time is always admissible to prove the larceny. If the jjossession be recent, it raises a prima facie presumption of guilt, and is of itself, if unexplained, conclusive evidence of guilt; if the possession be remote, additional circumstances are necessary to raise the presumption of guilt. [On this question, see last part of note 8 under sec. 6543 of the Code.]
   Carutiiers, J.,

delivered the opinon of the court:

This was a conviction for grand larceny, and it is contended that there should be a reversal on account of error in the charge of the court, upon the rule on the subject of guilty possession of stolen goods. Greenleaf, sec. 34, states the rule to be, "that the possession of the fruits of crime recently after its commission,” raises a presumption of guilt, prima facie only, of course. This single fact, if unexplained by direct evidence, the attending circumstances, good character, or otherwise, will be conclusive. Phillips, in Yol. 1, p. 168, 169, without the qualification of “recently” after the crime, or any reference to the nature of the property, states that the inference of guilt arising simply from the possession, will be much weakened by the lapse of a considerable time, or that the property was of a kind likely to pass in the interval through many hands. In Cowen & Hill’s notes to Phillips, Yol. 1, part 1, 425, 426, the question is more fully examined. The true rule seems to be, that the possession of stolen goods is always competent evidence without regard to time, though insufficient of itself, after a considerable lapse of time. If it be recent, it is conclusive, unexplained; if remote, additional circumstances of suspicion, arising out of the prisoner’s language or conduct, before or after the larceny, his false accounts of it, or his proximity to the time and place of taking, are necessary to raise the presumption of guilt; that is, in the one case it is not sufficient per se, and in the other it is, when unexplained. (2 East. P. C., 635; Russ, on Or., 1154; State vs. Adams, Haywood, 464.) This is the result of the authorities, and is the only reasonable rule on the subject. The charge is in substantial conformity to it, the proof of guilt is overwhelming, and the judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.