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Tucker v. State

Court of Appeals of Georgia
Nov 9, 1965
112 Ga. App. 622 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965)

Opinion

41616.

SUBMITTED NOVEMBER 2, 1965.

DECIDED NOVEMBER 9, 1965.

Larceny of automobile parts. Meriwether Superior Court. Before Judge Knight.

Ben R. Freeman, James E. Weldon, for appellant.

Wright Lipford, Solicitor General, for appellee.


1. An indictment charging larceny of "two 1965 Chevrolet Impala Supersport chrome hubcaps" is not subject to demurrer for vagueness or indefiniteness in the description.

2. Admission in evidence of two hubcaps of the same description carried in the indictment was not error, particularly when it appeared that the defendant had voluntarily directed the deputy sheriff to where they had been hidden under straw in a pine thicket and admitted that he had taken them from the car of the owner named in the indictment.

SUBMITTED NOVEMBER 2, 1965 — DECIDED NOVEMBER 9, 1965.


Robert Tucker, alias Bobby Tucker, was indicted and convicted of simple larceny. He was charged in the indictment with taking "two 1965 Chevrolet Impala Supersport chrome hubcaps" from the car of Vernon Phillips. A demurrer on the ground that because of vagueness in description of the articles alleged to have been taken no offense was charged against the defendant was overruled. Upon the trial the evidence disclosed that the owner of the automobile parked it on a public street in Greenville and went to Atlanta with another. When they returned about midnight the hubcaps were gone from the wheels on the left side. The matter was reported to the sheriff's office and a deputy made an investigation, leading to defendant's arrest.

At the jail defendant voluntarily told the deputy that he could take him to the place where the hubcaps were hidden. The deputy asked defendant whether he desired counsel at that stage, and he replied that he did not. Thereupon the deputy took defendant in an official car, following defendant's directions, to a pine thicket near where he lived and he showed the deputy where the hubcaps were covered with straw. He then stated to the deputy that he had taken the hubcaps from Phillips' car. The recovered hubcaps were admitted in evidence over objection because there was nothing to identify them as being the hubcaps taken from Phillips' car since there was no identifying mark or number on them.

To the overruling of his demurrer and the overruling of his amended motion for new trial defendant excepts.


Since the ground of the demurrer and the objection to the evidence which is the basis of the amended motion for new trial are the same these must stand or fall for the same reasons.

We cannot agree that the description of the hubcaps is too indefinite to support the charge. It is true that charges of the taking of "one shovel of the value of one dollar," ( Melvin v. State, 120 Ga. 490 ( 48 S.E. 198)), or "one black leather sample case, one black fiber sample case, one tan fiber sample case . . . eighty pounds of assorted candies . . . , one book photographs of candy . . ." with values stated, have been held too indefinite. Pharr v. State, 44 Ga. App. 363 ( 161 S.E. 643). If the indictment here had simply charged the defendant with taking two automobile hubcaps it would have been subject to the criticism made for "[i]t is not sufficient for the indictment merely to charge the defendant with having stolen a chair, a shovel, a table, a watermelon, or a pocket-knife. The marks, quality, or kind of the property must be incorporated in the description, or the transaction in some way individualized." Bright v. State, 10 Ga. App. 17, 18 ( 72 S.E. 519). But we hardly see how it could have been made more definite when in addition it was charged that the hubcaps were from a 1965 Chevrolet car, from the particular model known as the Impala, of the Supersport type and made of chrome. Much of the great mass of property is without any particular identifying mark or number, e.g., corn, cotton, lumber, gasoline, chickens, etc. Consequently, a demurrer calling for identifying marks or numbers generally calls for an impossibility. But one who has asported that type of property is not to be immune from prosecution on that account. He is entitled to have identifying characteristics which are sufficient to inform him of the instance meant and to enable the jury to determine that the article taken was indeed that which the owner lost. Ayers v. State, 3 Ga. App. 305 (1) ( 59 S.E. 924). The identification here was sufficient. Compare McNatt v. State, 27 Ga. App. 642 (3) ( 109 S.E. 514).

An indictment for the larceny of "a lot of cord wood" was too indefinite because there was no statement of quantity, a "lot" simply meaning a great deal ( Walthour v. State, 114 Ga. 75 ( 39 S.E. 872)), and one charging the taking of "two and one half gallons of syrup" was lacking since the defendant was entitled to know the kind of syrup he was charged with stealing. Mathis v. State, 27 Ga. App. 229 ( 107 S.E. 629). Here the defendant was apprized of the quantity and the particular type and kind of hubcaps taken and sufficiently to withstand the demurrer. His objection to admission of the hubcaps in evidence must fail for the additional reason that he had taken the deputy sheriff to their hiding place and admitted that he had removed them from the Phillips car.

Judgment affirmed. Nichols, P. J., and Pannell, J., concur.


Summaries of

Tucker v. State

Court of Appeals of Georgia
Nov 9, 1965
112 Ga. App. 622 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965)
Case details for

Tucker v. State

Case Details

Full title:TUCKER v. THE STATE

Court:Court of Appeals of Georgia

Date published: Nov 9, 1965

Citations

112 Ga. App. 622 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965)
145 S.E.2d 751

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