Court Opinion

ID: 3681156
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:26:42.910864+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:28:38.670911
License: Public Domain

The defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny. On or about the 6th day of June, 1924, one Barney Cavin stole an automobile belonging to Charles K. Otto of Valley City, this state, from the owner's garage, and took it to Tolley, a village in Renville county, where the defendant at that time lived. Cavin was a son-in-law of the defendant. The defendant was convicted as a principal, under § 9218, Comp. Laws 1913, on the theory that he had "advised and encouraged" the commission of the crime. Cavin pleaded guilty to the crime of larceny and testified as a witness in behalf of the state. Cavin had seduced defendant's daughter, and there is evidence tending to show that the marriage, which took place a few days before the conspiracy to steal the automobile was formed, was one entirely of convenience. The third side to the triangle of crime as disclosed in the record, was made by one A.R. Taute, a pool hall proprietor at Tolley. The state contends that Pellet, Cavin and Taute met at the latter's home and there agreed that Cavin would steal a car for Taute, and that Pellet furnished the security for the cash payment of $150, made by Taute at the time in anticipation of Cavin's success in finding a suitable automobile. Taute admits that he knew Cavin intended to steal a car and that when the automobile was delivered to him he knew it was stolen property. Upon the face of the record it is clear that Taute *Page 186 
and Cavin were accomplices, and it would have been proper to so instruct the jury. The defendant contends that Mrs. Taute was also an accomplice, and that a peremptory instruction to that effect should have been given. This point need not be decided. She denies knowledge of the conspiracy; her husband's testimony, however, strongly tends to support the view that she knew such suspicious facts, and circumstances of such an incriminating nature that she probably was aware of the existence of the conspiracy in all its essential aspects. In any event, we think it was a question for the jury whether she was an accomplice, and that a peremptory instruction would not have been justified in the circumstances.
Many errors are assigned. Only one need be considered. Taute was under cross examination by defendant's counsel; witness had admitted that he had been guilty of and punished for gambling and bootlegging, whereupon many questions were asked with reference to a fight with defendant and the presence of minors in the pool-room operated by the witness; counsel then left this subject and asked about the transactions between defendant and this witness which culminated in the crime of which defendant was convicted. After the witness had detailed the circumstances of the conspiracy, the following took place:
Q. I want to get the facts just as they are; you have made a statement to the state's attorney in regard to this matter, haven't you?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And you made an affidavit about it, didn't you?
A. Yes.
Q. And you have told this same story that you told on the witness stand, haven't you in substance?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And you have never been arrested for these offenses you committed up there, have you?
Mr. Ritchie: Objected to as immaterial.
The Court: The objection is sustained. The fact of an arrest should not go before the jury.
Mr. Sinkler: If your honor please, I am not criticising that proposition; but the purpose of this testimony is that if he told the state's *Page 187 
attorney just exactly what he has testified to here, he is equally guilty with Barney Cavin and nothing has been done, and it means this, that some promises must have been held out to this man for the purpose of influencing his testimony.
The Court: The jury will disregard all this talk as it is not for the jury at all and is no part of the evidence to come before you.
The defendant contends that it was prejudicial error to exclude inquiry into facts which might disclose that the witness had an interest or felt a bias that tended to color his testimony. Counsel made his purpose clear. There is no room for the construction which the state seeks to put on this part of the record to the effect that the true object of the examination was obscure and that the phrase "these offenses" really referred to the offenses of gambling and bootlegging of which Taute had admitted himself to have been guilty. That particular subject had been abandoned and an entirely new line of examination commenced. Moreover, defendant's counsel expressly stated to the court that his purpose was to unfold before the jury a situation, with respect to the failure of the state to prosecute this witness, that would cast doubt upon the existence of that wholly disinterested frame of mind, essential to complete confidence in the candor of a witness. The expression "these offenses" was clearly justified and proper with reference to the crime under investigation. Taute's own story up to this point in the trial, revealed that he was guilty of at least three crimes, namely: conspiracy, receiving stolen property, and grand larceny. We see no escape from the conclusion that it was prejudicial error to close this avenue of examination. It has been the law in this jurisdiction for over thirty years that great latitude should be allowed in the examination of an accomplice. In the fifth paragraph of the syllabus to the case of State v. Kent, 4 N.D. 577, 27 L.R.A. 686, 62 N.W. 631, it is said:
"Held, further, that it was error to refuse to permit counsel for the accused to prove, as bearing upon the credibility of the accomplice, that no proceedings whatever had been instituted against him for the murder he had confessedly committed, although several months had elapsed since he had confessed his connection with the crime." *Page 188 
See also State v. Ritz, 65 Mont. 180, 211 P. 300; 40 Cyc. 2511.
There must be a new trial. It is so ordered.
CHRISTIANSON, Ch. J., and BURKE, BIRDZELL, and NUESSLE, JJ., concur.