Court Opinion

ID: 6699679
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 22:05:45.534049+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:22.267917
License: Public Domain

DeNNY, J.
The defendant assigns as error the denial of his motion for judgment as of nonsuit, but we think the evidence produced by the State was sufficient to carry the ease to the jury.
The defendant’s assignment of error, however, based on exceptions to those portions of the charge which deal with the presumption of guilt arising from “recent possession,” must be sustained.
The parts of the charge complained of were taken almost verbatim from charges which this Court approved in the cases of S. v. White, 196 N.C. 1, 144 S.E. 299, and S. v. Baker, 213 N.C. 524, 196 S.E. 829. But the facts with respect to “recent possession” in those cases were substantially different from those in the present case. In the White case, a watch was stolen in Pasquotank County from the bedroom of the prosecuting witness on the night of 18 October, 1927. On 24 February, 1928, the defendant was arrested for peeping into the windows of a residence in Elizabeth City. When taken to prison he was searched and the watch of the prosecuting witness was found in his possession. The State offered evidence to the effect that the watch was in the possession of the defendant prior to 1 November, 1927. In the Balcer case, the defendant was charged with the larceny of a cow. The cow was stolen in Edgecombe County on the night of 28 October, 1937, and found in the possession of the defendant in Wayne County on 3 November, 1937. The defendant testified that he bought the cow from the truck of an unknown man just outside of Smith-field in Johnston County on 1 November, 1937.
In the present case, the automobile of David E. Womble was stolen in Durham on the night of 19 October, 1953, and found 82 days later, on 9 January, 1954, in possession of the defendant, near New Bern, North Carolina. However, the State offered no evidence tending to show how *435long tbe defendant bad been in possession of tbe stolen property prior to bis arrest, as it did in tbe case of S. v. White, supra. Also, tbe defendant in S. v. Baker, supra, bad possession of tbe stolen cow so soon after it was stolen that the possession gave rise to a presumption of guilt. But, under our decisions, tbe time tbat elapsed in .this case between tbe theft and tbe arrest of tbe defendant was too long under tbe circumstances revealed on tbe record for tbe mere possession of tbe property to infer guilt on tbe part of tbe defendant or to create a presumption thereof. S. v. Absher, 230 N.C. 598, 54 S.E. 2d 922; S. v. Holbrook, 223 N.C. 622, 27 S.E. 2d 725; S. v. Rights, 82 N.C. 675.
In the last cited case, tbe Court said: “It is a general rule tbat whenever tbe property of one, which has been taken from him without bis knowledge or consent, is found in tbe possession of another, it is incumbent on tbat other to prove bow he came by it, otherwise tbe presumption is tbat be came by it feloniously. But in applying tbis rule due attention must be paid to tbe circumstances by which such presumption may be weakened or strengthened, depending on the length of time intervening between tbe theft and tbe finding of tbe goods in tbe possession of tbe party accused. . . . Ordinarily it is stronger or weaker in proportion to tbe period intervening between the stealing and tbe finding in possession of tbe accused; and after tbe lapse of a considerable time before a possession is shown in tbe accused, the lavi does not infer bis guilt, but leaves tbat question to tbe jury under tbe consideration of all the' circumstances.”
In applying our decisions to tbe facts in tbis case, in our opinion, tbe possession of tbe car in question, in tbe absence of evidence as to when or under what circumstances tbe defendant came into possession of it, is only a circumstance, without presumptive significance, to be considered with tbe other facts and circumstances by tbe jury in determining whether tbe State has carried tbe burden of satisfying tbe jury beyond a reasonable doubt of tbe defendant’s guilt. S. v. Absher, supra; S. v. Holbrook, supra; S. v. McFalls, 221 N.C. 22, 18 S.E. 2d 700; S. v. Lippard, 183 N.C. 786, 111 S.E. 722; S. v. Anderson, 162 N.C. 571, 77 S.E. 238; S. v. Rights, supra.
In tbe case of S. v. Absher, supra, an automobile was stolen in Elkin in Surry County on 8 March, 1948. Three months later, on 7 June, 1948, in North Wilkesboro, in tbe adjoining County of Wilkes, tbe defendant Absher was found in tbe possession of an automobile, tbe body of which was identified as having originally been a part of tbe automobile stolen in Surry County on 8 March, 1948, but tbe chassis and motor bad belonged to a different vehicle. On appeal to tbis Court, we held there was error in tbe court’s charge to tbe jury in permitting it to take into consideration, in arriving at its verdict, inferences of guilt arising from tbe *436possession of the stolen property. Devin, J., (later Chief Justice), speaking for the Court, said: “In so charging we think the court inadvertently submitted to the jury a point of view more favorable to the State than the facts warranted. The jurors were permitted to consider the circumstances of this case in the light of the doctrine of the recent possession of stolen goods as creating an inference or presumption of guilt, and, under the principle of law, to give added weight to the evidence of the possession of the stolen property in North "Wllkesboro, as ground for rendering-verdict of guilty, when according to the evidence three months had elapsed from the time of the larceny of the automobile to the time a part of it was found in possession of the defendant in North Wilkesboro. Under the circumstances here this would not warrant submitting this principle to the jury as the basis for a verdict of guilty as charged in the bill. S. v. Cameron, 223 N.C. 449, 27 S.E. 2d 81; S. v. Holbrook, 223 N.C. 622, 27 S.E. 2d 725; S. v. Weinstein, 224 N.C. 645, 31 S.E. 2d 920; S. v. Jones, 227 N.C. 47, 40 S.E. 2d 458.”
It may be noted further that while the State did show that the defendant was operating the stolen car with an improper license plate attached thereto, being one issued for a 194S Ford automobile, it did not show to whom the license for the 1948 automobile was issued by the Department of Motor Vehicles.
The defendant is entitled to a new trial and it is so ordered.
New trial.