49 S.W. 387 JONES v. STATE. Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas. February 1, 1899. Appeal from district court, Ellis county; J. E. Dillard, Judge. Jesse Jones was convicted of theft of a horse, and he appeals. Reversed. W. H. Fears, for appellant. Robt. A. John, for the State. HENDERSON, J. Appellant was convicted of the theft of a horse, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of two years; hence this appeal. The only questions we deem necessary to be considered are the charge of the court on the question of appropriation, and whether or not the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict. The indictment is in the ordinary form of an indictment for theft. The proof shows that the possession of the property was acquired by a hiring, and the theory of the state was that the hiring was a false pretext, and that appellant then intended to deprive the owner of the value thereof, and to appropriate the same to his own use and benefit, and that he did so appropriate it. To go more into the details concerning the evidence on this point: The testimony for the state tends to show that appellant, in the morning of the 10th of December, 1897, applied to prosecutor, Pryor, who was a livery stable keeper in Ennis, to hire a saddle horse. Appellant stated at the time that he desired to go into the country to see a negro who lived on a large farm, some five or six miles from the town. Prosecutor, Pryor, asked him the name of the negro, and he stated that he did not remember the name; that he (appellant) was a stranger there; that the negro lived on a large farm. Prosecutor then asked him if it was Jim Madison, who lived on Getzendaner's place. Appellant said, "Yes." This witness stated that the farm of Getzendaner, on which Jim Madison lived, was 5 or 6 miles in a southeast direction from Ennis, and that Corsicana, where appellant was subsequently found with the horse, was 20 miles in a southeast direction from Ennis. Appellant, after negotiating for the horse, went up town, and in a short time came back, with a bottle of whisky in his pocket. He appeared to be drinking some, but not drunk. He left the stable, riding the horse, about 8:30 a. m. About 2 o'clock on that same evening, one Bob Sizemore, who was acquainted with the horse, saw defendant with the horse at Corsicana. He accosted defendant, and asked him where he got the horse. He replied that he got him in Ennis. Witness then asked him if he was going back to Ennis, and defendant said, "Yes," that he was going that evening. Appellant was seen riding up and down the street for some hour or two after this. By one witness he was seen near a wagon yard where some horse traders were, Page 388 who asked him if he did not want to trade the horse, and witness stated that he did not hear what passed between them. The only expression he heard was from appellant, who stated that the sorrel mare was the only one he would have, pointing to one of the horses of the parties, and then rode off. It appears that appellant was under the influence of liquor while at Corsicana. After this he had an altercation at the wagon yard, and received a stab in the shoulder, and went or was taken to a drug store; and the horse was taken by Sizemore, and returned to the owner, at Ennis. It was further shown that appellant was a stranger at Ennis, and had only arrived there the night before, having come from the Indian Territory. According to his account, he was on his way from Ardmore to his former home, in Freestone county, and had stopped at Ennis to see if he could get a place to work; had heard of the negro Madison, and intended to go out there to see if he could get a home with him, and hired the horse for that purpose. He further testified that he did not remember what occurred; that he got drunk after leaving the stable at Ennis, and did not know what took place at Corsicana; that he intended to return to Ennis with the horse on that evening. This is substantially all the testimony bearing on the case. It has been held by this court that, under an ordinary indictment for theft, proof can be made, under article 861, Pen. Code 1895, of theft by means of a false pretext. Dow v. State, 12 Tex. App. 343; Morrison v. State, 17 Tex. App. 34; Atterberry v. State, 19 Tex. App. 401. In such case the proof must show that the obtention of possession was by means of some false pretext made for that purpose, and that the party had the intent at the time to deprive the owner of the value thereof, and to appropriate the property to his own use, and that he did so appropriate it. Measured by this rule, it does not appear to us that the proof shows these constituent elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. So far as the evidence discloses, there was no positive proof of an actual appropriation of the property. It is true this proof can be made by circumstances, and the party may convert the property to his own use while he still has it in possession, not having parted with it; but in such case the proof should establish the fact of the appropriation beyond a probability or suspicion. So far as we are advised from the testimony, there was no concealment on the part of appellant when found at Corsicana as to where he got the horse, and his conduct there was not inconsistent with his trusteeship and his intent to restore such horse to the owner. Furthermore, we do not believe the evidence establishes beyond a reasonable doubt that, when appellant hired the horse at Ennis, he then had the present intent to steal the same. The most that can be said is that instead of going to Getzendaner's farm, some 5 or 6 miles distant, which was in the same direction as Corsicana, he went to Corsicana, some 20 miles distant. Appellant may have been guilty of lying when he procured the horse as to his purpose in making the hiring. He may have apprehended that Pryor would not so readily hire the horse for the purpose of going to Corsicana as going only a few miles in the country, and so have made a false statement, not for the purpose of stealing, but for the purpose of hiring. In our opinion, the evidence in this regard fails to disclose his fraudulent intent at the time with that degree of cogency required by the law. In this connection we would also call attention to the court's charge on this subject, which was excepted to. The court, perhaps, in this charge, sufficiently instructed the jury with reference to the intent at the time he procured possession of said animal; but he does not appear to have instructed the jury pointedly with reference to the appropriation, but confined the instruction merely to an intent to appropriate. The jury should have been distinctly instructed as to the appropriation by appellant. For the errors discussed, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded. DAVIDSON, P. J., absent.