v.
Max Strum
On this foundation, he was allowed, over apt objections, to testify concerning the reasonable market value of some of the articles alleged to have been stolen, giving their value as of the time defendant is charged with receiving them. The question is whether the reception of this testimony constitutes error.
Engster v. State, 11 Neb. 539 (10 N. W. 453), lays down the general proposition that, before a witness is com- ' [*1169] petent to testify as to tlie value of property, he must show by his testimony that he has knowledge of the value of such property. In that case, one witness, being asked whether he was a judge of clothing, answered, “Yes, of my own,” and testified, too, that he “guesses he was a judge of the price of clothing.” Another testified he had worked in a general merchandise store, and thinks he is acquainted with the value of clothing; and he was then permitted to testify as to value, though it nowhere appears he had purchased or sold clothing, or knew anything of its value. It was held that no competency was shown. But we think the rule is not thus strict in this jurisdiction. In Jeffries v. Snyder, 110 Iowa 359, we held that one owning or using household goods is competent to testify as to their value, without showing special qualifications enabling him to express an opinion. In Colby v. Kimball, 99 Iowa 321, it is held that, in the absence of specific objection to the competency of the witness, he may give his opinion as to the value of a piano, although he has not been expressly examined with respect to his knowledge of value, if he has so testified as to show that he knows something of pianos. In State v. Finch, 70 Iowa 316, we go so far as to hold that where, in a prosecution for the larceny of a sealskin overcoat, a witness testifies he had never seen such a coat bought or sold, and did not show* he had any knowledge of the value of such an article, except such as any man of ordinary intelligence might be presumed to have, his testimony as to the value of the coat was admissible. In State v. Hathaway, 100 Iowa 225, it is held that, where the article stolen consists of a trunk containing the family wearing apparel, the wife of prosecutor, after testifying that she knew the value of the articles, is competent to testify as to such value, though she may not have known the value in a secondhand store, or at public auction. The holding of McMahon v. City of Dubuque, 107 Iowa 62, is that, on a negligent burning of household goods [*1170] and wearing apparel used by a family, the actual value, based on their cost, condition, and age, and not their market value, is the measure of damages. In Latham v. Shipley, 86 Iowa 543, there was no evidence that a machine used by printers, and possessing the same defects as the one in inquiry, was so common as to be considered in fixing prices, and no testimony that such had a fixed market value in Chicago; but it was held that'one who was shown to have a practical knowledge of such machines, from his avocation as a printer, and to know something of their value from price lists, was competent to testify as to the value of the machine in question. And while the general market value of stolen property governs, in determining its value in case of larceny, when this property has no general market value, the original cost may be shown, in connection with its condition at the time of the larceny, to prove its value when stolen. State v. Lewis, 144 Iowa 483.
We incline to think that the objections to the testimony of Bird are not well taken.
II. After the jury was empaneled, and before the opening statements were made, the attorney for the defendants made the following admission of record:
3. Criminal law: avoiding evidence of other offenses. “Comes now the defendant in open courtj in the presence of the court and jury, anci states that whatever act he did with which he is charged, he did it designedly; that it was not accidental or unintentional or through inadvertence; and that whatever he did, he did knowingly.”
Over apt objection, testimony was admitted tending to show that the defendant had bought stolen property through a transaction not connected with the one being prosecuted for, and occurring prior to the act upon which the indictment is based. One defense of its admission made by the State is that evidence of the purchase of other stolen brass is admissible to show the intent, and the absence of mis [*1171] take or accident; and the many cases cited for this proposition fully sustain the statement. But the question remains whether, since this is the only purpose for which such evidence is properly receivable, it may be adduced, over objection, when there is an admission of record that there was no accident or mistake, and that whatever was done was done intentionally and knowingly. On this question, the State relies upon State v. Stansberry, 182 Iowa 908, and some other decisions, including one in Kansas, which are fully considered in the Stansberry case. There is nothing in that case that permits evidence which is manifestly needless, and is calculated to arouse prejudice. The reasoning upon which the case is bottomed is that the bloody clothing of one assaulted, where it is charged there was an intent to murder, may be received in evidence, though the defendant concedes on the trial “that whatever described by Dr. Printz by the way of cuts resulting in loss of blood were made by this defendant, and made by him in the exercise of right of self-defense;” and its reasoning is that, since this concession does not admit an intent to murder, and, at most, amounts to no more than saying that the wounds were no worse than one witness for the State describes, such admission could not foreclose the right of the State to show, by the condition of the clothing, that the injury was more aggravated than the testimony of the doctor disclosed, and was of such character as to indicate an intent to murder. It is manifest that this case cannot rule, if it once be conceded that, in whatsoever the defendant here did, he acted, not by accident or mistake, but intentionally and knowingly; that it cannot rule where testimony is forced into the record which has no right to be there, except to show that the defendant did act intentionally, after he has solemnly admitted of record that this is so. We do not see that McIntire v. State, 10 Ind. 26, adds much to the position of appellant. It holds that it is error to per [*1172] mit testimony tending to sliow that the person of whom defendant had received the property had stolen other property oí’ the same kind from another person at a different time. On the other hand, State v. Dexter, 115 Iowa 678, cited by the State, certainly throws no light on the point in debate; for all it rules is that, on the charge of having obtained goods by false pretenses, evidence that defendant procured goods from others on the same representations is admissible. But in State v. Vance, 119 Iowa 685, it is held that, on a prosecution for lewdness, where the defendant admits, in open court and before the jury, that, if what is charged were, in fact, done, it was designedly done, it is error to admit evidence of other similar acts done in the presence of other parties, for the purpose of showing intent. The appellee intimates that the case is questionable authority. But it has been approved in Sorenson v. United States, 168 Fed. 785, at 794. Its rule is distinctly affirmed in State v. Weaver, 182 Iowa 921. It is approved in State v. Crofford, 121 Iowa 395, at 405, and dealt with approvingly in State v. Berger, 121 Iowa 581, at 586, State v. Clark, 160 Iowa 138, at 146, State v. Neubauer, 145 Iowa 337, at 345, State v. O’Connell, 144 Iowa 559, at 562, and State v. Lewis, 139 Iowa 405, at 408.
It was error to receive this testimony.
III. It is asserted there is no competent evidence that the property stolen and alleged to be that of the Artificial Ice and Fuel Company of Waterloo was the property of that corporation.
The same point is made, in a different form, by the statement that it is not proper to admit evidence of the value of the articles nof alleged in the indictment to have been stolen. This refers to permitting Bird to say that the “self-feeding lubricator” was worth $25. The point is not well taken. The indictment does allege that just such a lubricator was stolen. Possibly the contention rests also on the fact that the witness spoke of the lubricator stolen as “a force-feed lubricator.” To repeat, the point is a strained one.
IX. True, on the charge of receiving stolen property, the value of the property must be measured as of the. time when it was received, and not the time when it was stolen. But if it competently appear what the value was when stolen, and further, there is evidence from which the jury may find that the condition of the stolen property remained unchanged, or substantially so, at the time when it was received, then testimony as to value at the time of the theft is not improper. We are of opinion there was evidence from which the jury could find there was no change in value between these two points of time, and that, hence, evidence received as to the value at the time the property was stolen, should not have been excluded because the ultimate question is value at the time of receiving. We do not think the complaint well taken that Objection 7 confuses the time of the theft with the time of receiving.
[*1176]
XIII. There is an assignment that the instructions were erroneous as a whole, because they are long and involved, and so complicated as that it is impossible for any intelligent juryman to understand what the court was trying to say to the jury, and the charge tended to confuse, rather than to give light upon any of the questions involved. It may well be doubted whether this is specific enough to entitle to review. But be that as it may, all that is practicable to say, within the reasonable length of an opinion, is that the charge, as a whole, is not open to this objection.
XIV. In State v. Peirce, 178 Iowa 417, at 422, et [*1178] seq., we pointed out how conflicting the decisions were, upon when it was proper to give the jury an additional instruction, after there was failure for a long time to reach a verdict, and how difficult it was to determine from the decisions when the form of such an instruction was proper. We tried, in the Peirce case, to indicate what, if any, general rule might be deduced from the decisions as a whole, and proceeded to say that “the rule as above stated shows on its face how difficult it is to apply it with safety to the rights of the parties. That it is the one which our holdings compel, does not obviate its dangers. Therefore, though its wording is technically correct, and has often been approved, it will be better not to give it, unless it be in an extreme case.” We shall not lengthen this opinion by setting out the instruction complained of, nor even an analysis of it. We thus refrain because there must be a reversal on other grounds, and no occasion may arise, on a retrial, to give such additional instruction.
For the errors pointed out in Paragraph 2 of the opinion, there must be a i*eversal. — Reversed and remoulded.