Court Opinion

ID: 3269324
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:37:42.035292+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:13:27.489934
License: Public Domain

Sol Holden prosecutes this appeal to reverse a judgment of conviction against him for grand larceny, charged to have been committed by stealing 1,200 lbs. of seed cotton of the value of $100, the property of R. R. Rice. *Page 466 
The first assignment of error is that the verdict is not legally supported by the evidence.
On the part of the State it was shown that the cotton in question was grown on the farm of R. R. Rice, in Lincoln County, Arkansas, by a negro called Cool Shorty. Shorty was to pay one-fourth of the cotton raised by him as rent. He was also indebted to Rice for supplies, and it was their custom for the cotton to be sold by Rice and the proceeds applied first to the payment of the rent and the balance to the payment of the supply account.
Holden procured Augustus Bradley to drive a wagon containing a bale of cotton to a gin at the town of Gould. The cotton was out on the pike, and Holden told Bradley, if any one asked whose cotton it was, to tell them that it belonged to him (Holden). This was in the night time. The evidence shows that the cotton in question was raised on the farm of R. R. Rice by Cool Shorty. Holden went ahead of the wagon, on horseback, and took charge of the cotton at the gin. He had it ginned as his own cotton, and then sold it as his own cotton. The cotton was sold without the knowledge or consent of Rice. The value of the rent cotton in question belonging to Rice was $32 or more.
It is next insisted that there is a variance between the proof and the indictment. We cannot agree with counsel in this contention. The indictment charged that Holden sold 1,200 lbs. of seed cotton of the value of $100, the property of R. R. Rice. The proof shows that this cotton was grown on the farm of R. R. Rice, and that he had a lien on it for rent and supplies. A tenant by whom the cotton was grown was to pay him one-fourth of it for rent and the balance was to be applied to the payment of his supply account. The cotton was to be sold by Rice. It is fairly inferable from this testimony that the cotton was in the possession of Rice, and that he had a special ownership in it. Blankenship v. State, 55 Ark. 244, and State v. Esmond, 135 Ark. 168.
It is next insisted that the court erred in giving instruction No. 3, which reads as follows: *Page 467 
"If you find from the evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a man by the name of Cool Shorty raised the cotton in question under an agreement with R. R. Rice, the landowner, by the terms of which said R. R. Rice was to receive one-fourth of the cotton, then as a matter of law the title to that part of the cotton stolen, if you find the same was stolen, would be in the said R. R. Rice."
The defendant objected specifically to the instruction on the ground that it tells the jury as a matter of law that Rice was the owner of the land under contract to receive one-fourth of the cotton from Cool Shorty.
We do not think the instruction is fairly susceptible to this construction. It tells the jury that, if it finds from the evidence that Shorty raised the cotton under an agreement with Rice that he was to receive one-fourth of the cotton as rent, then as a matter of law the title to that part of the cotton was in Rice. There was no error in giving this instruction. The proof on the part of the State, if believed by the jury, showed special ownership of the rent cotton in Rice.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed.