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Opinion of the Court-Sullivan, J.

470; People v. Uh Dong, 106 Cal. 83, 39 Pac. 12; State v. Haverly, 4 Idaho, 484, 42 Pac. 506; Chamberlain v. Woodin, 2 Idaho, 642, 23 Pac. 177.) A substantial conflict is in no way dependent upon the preponderance of the testimony, and even if the evidence apparently preponderates against the verdict, it would not justify this court in overturning it. (Smith v. Thomas, 121 Cal. 533, 54 Pac. 71; Meyer v. G. W. Ins. Co., 104 Cal. 381, 38 Pac. 82; Livingston v. Packing Co., 103 Cal. 258, 37 Pac. 149; Bradford v. Woodworth, 108 Cal. 684, 41 Pac. 797.) It is well established both by our statutes and a long line of decisions of this court that a judgment will not be reversed by this court for an error committed at the trial, unless some substantial right of the defendant was injured thereby. (Rev. Stats., secs. 7687, 8236; In re Marshall, 6 Idaho, 516, 56 Pac. 470; State v. Reed, 3 Idaho, 754, 35 Pac. 706; State v. Ellington, 4 Idaho, 529, 43 Pac. 60; State v. Larkins, 5 Idaho, 200, 47 Pac. 945.)

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SULLIVAN, J.-The defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny, and from the judgment of conviction and order denying a new trial appealed to this court at the May term, 1900. (See 61 Pac. 1033.) The court there held that the evidence was insufficient to establish the guilt of the defendant, and the cause was remanded to the lower court. The cause was again brought on for trial in the district court at the November term, 1900. The county attorney thereupon. made a motion to dismiss the case, which motion writing, and is as follows: "Henry D. Wilding was duly called and sworn as a witness on the part of the prosecution, and testified as follows: Counsel for defendant at this time objected to the introduction of any testimony in this case, for the reason that the prosecuting attorney had theretofore asked the privilege and made a motion to dismiss this case for the reasons stated in said motion, which are as follows: 'In the District Court of Fremont County, State of Idaho. State of Idaho, Plaintiff, v. Emery H. Seymour, Defendant. Now comes J. E. Cochran, county attorney of Fremont county, and asks that the within case be dismissed for the following rea

Opinion of the Court-Sullivan, J.

sons: 1. Because, upon the evidence submitted upon the former trial, the supreme court of the state has held insufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty, and has remanded it for trial which means, impliedly, if we have or can supply more competent evidence; otherwise, of course, they mean that he shall be discharged. This prosecution, being fraught with great interest to the people of the county, has been very industriously and vigilantly prepared and prosecuted by all the officers of this and the former county administration whose duty it was se to do, and every particle of legitimate evidence that any of us could procure we did, and it was well and forcibly presented at the former trial, and consisted of the testimony of witnesses whom the jury knew, and who comprise many of our best and most highly respected citizens, including our ex-sheriff and our present sheriff, and leading representative farmers of the county. From these witnesses the prosecution has not an additional fact that can be presented, and nothing from any witnesses of their standing or integrity. The only further testimony will be such as Edward H. Trafton, his wife, and one Ben Williams may swear to, and what that will be I think no man can know until it proceeds from the mouth on the witnessstand, and from my knowledge of them would not believe them under oath; and I here apologize to the court for asking their indorsement on the information, knowing them as I do now, their character and reputation, but it was done by request, and without knowledge of what their testimony will be, and without stopping then, as I should have done, and considered fully the matter. At the former trial of this case Trafton was here as a witness for the defendant, and, further, officiated in the capacity of attempting to get witnesses for the state to withhold testimony, and this court, on hearing of that action, ordered me to investigate the facts, which I did, and prosecuted him for that offense, and convicted him of it in the probate court. Since that time one of the Seymour boys was a witness, and an unwilling one, on the part of the state against this same Trafton on a charge of petit larceny; and, when he was convicted for that offense, he, in my presence and others, stated that he would get even for that, if not on him, he would on

Opinion of the Court-Sullivan, J.

Emery Seymour, this defendant; and to this day he is under bonds to appear for preliminary examination on a charge of grand larceny, and the records of the criminal courts of this county abound in cases of the state of Idaho against Edward H. Trafton, and his reputation is such that he cannot and ought not to be believed. Of Mrs. Trafton, I have but to say that she is his wife, and has always been a witness when he was, and from their testimony I conclude that they are as man and wife are sometimes described, "as the twain being one flesh." Ben Williams I understand to be a fugitive from justice, and to escape prosecution for grand larceny, and not a stranger to the criminal dockets of this county, and I am informed is not and will not come into the jurisdiction of this court. Therefore, in view of the decision of the supreme court of this state, regardless of individual opinion as to its correctness, we will all treat it with the respect and force to which it is entitled, and, in view of the fact that we have no further reputable evidence, I am of the opinion that the necessarily great expense that its further prosecution will entail on the county ought not to be encouraged. While the court and all of its officers have done all that could be done, I feel that we would not now be justified in its further prosecution, even if a conviction should be possible from the testimony of witnesses of the character of the ones last indorsed on the information. Respectfully submitted, J. E. Cochran.""

The county attorney therein states that the prosecution had no further reputable evidence than was given on the former trial, and that, as the supreme court had held that the evidence at the former trial was not sufficient to convict for that reason, he moved to dismiss said case. The record shows that the county attorney acted in perfect good faith, and in line with his duty, in making said motion. (See Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 5th ed., p. 379, and note 3.) The court denied the motion, and proceeded with the trial. The defendant was convicted, and judgment of imprisonment imposed. A motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal is from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

Opinion of the Court-Sullivan, J.

The evidence is substantially the same as that given on the former trial. However, the state produced as witnesses a Mrs. Trafton, William Lyman and Seth Ellsworth, who had not testified on the former trial. Witness Bruce testified that he and one Ben Williams, on their trip from Teton Basin, about June 15, 1897, from whence they drove the animal alleged to have been stolen, with several others, stopped at Trafton's or Harrington's ranch overnight, and put the cattle they were driving in a corral there for the night. Mrs. Trafton was called to show that witness Bruce and said Williams did not stop overnight at Trafton's, as testified to by Bruce. She testified that Bruce and Williams did not stop overnight at Trafton's ranch in June, 1897. On cross-examination she testified that they might have stopped there on the 14th or 15th of June. It appears that this witness refreshed her memory from a book that was considerably mutilated by having leaves torn out. William Lyman, brother of Mrs. Trafton, also testified that Bruce never stopped at Trafton's in the month of June, 1897, and put cattle in the corral, to his knowledge; but that it would have been possible for them to have stopped there all night without his knowing it, as he was away some of the time. Five witnesses testified that Mrs. Trafton's reputation for truth and integrity was bad. Counsel for defendant offered to prove by Captain Aller and his son Amos that said Aller and son stopped at the said Trafton ranch overnight about the 15th of June, 1897, and that one Ben Williams and D. C. Bruce stayed overnight at the residence and ranch of said Trafton, and that they drove four head of cattle to that ranch, placed them in the corral that night, and the next morning turned them out of the corral and drove them toward St. Anthony. The county attorney interposed thereto, on the ground that said testimony was not rebuttal or sur-rebuttal testimony, but evidence in chief on the part of the defense, and cumulative, which objection was sustained by the court. It was prejudicial error to reject said testimony, provided the question whether said Bruce and Williams stopped at said Trafton's, as testified to by Bruce, was a material point in the case. As it went to the truthfulness of witness Bruce as to the place

Opinion of the Court-Sullivan, J.

from whence, and the route over which, the animal alleged to have been stolen was driven, we think it had a bearing in the case, and was proper to go to the jury. The testimony of said witness Lyman shows that Bruce and Williams might have stopped at Trafton's, as sworn to by Bruce, and Lyman not have known it. The witness Bruce described Ben Williams as having light hair, while Seth Ellsworth, a witness for the prosecution, testified that his complexion was darker than medium, and that he thought his hair was nearly black.

The testimony above set forth of the witnesses, Mrs. Trafton, Lyman and Ellsworth, is all of the evidence introduced by the state in addition to the evidence on the first trial of the case, and does not materially change the evidence on which the defendant was first convicted. This court held on the former appeal that that evidence was not sufficient to sustain the verdict. Mrs. Trafton was most thoroughly impeached, and, aside from that, the defendant offered to show, by two disinterested witnesses, that Bruce and Williams did stop overnight at the Trafton ranch about June 15, 1897. However, Mrs. Trafton testified on cross-examination that they might have stopped there on the 14th or 15th of June, 1897. The color of Ben Williams' hair was an immaterial matter, and the difference in the opinions of the two witnesses who testified on that point can have no important bearing in this case.

The attorney general quotes from the testimony of the defendant, and the quotations, taken alone, would indicate that the defendant had testified, on direct examination, that Williams had purchased several head of cattle for him, and on cross-examination that he had purchased but one. But that testimony, as we read it, states that Williams only purchased one animal on his trip to the Teton Basin. He testified as follows: "That is the only animal that he bought and delivered. . . . . When he came in from Teton Basin he returned the money I had given him. He paid $17 for the critter. . . . . He did not buy any more cattle at all." In other words, that was the only one that he bought on that trip.

As there is no material change in the evidence from that given on the first trial, the cause must be determined upon the same

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