
    Holford v. The State.
    indictment for receiving stolen goods knowing them to -be stolen. Held, that the timo and place, when and where the goods were stolen, need not .he staled in the indictment, nor proved at the tiial.
    ERROR to the Dearborn CircuifCourt.
    Saturday, November 17,
   Scott, J.

Holford was indicted in the Dearborn Circuit Court for receiving stolen goods.,- on which indictment there was a verdict of conviction, and judgment; The errors assigned are, that the indictment does not allege any time and place when and where the goods were stolen; and that, on the trial, there was no evidence to prove that the said goods were stolen within the state of Indiana.

To test the validity of the errors .assigned, it is necessary only to revert to the statute creating the offence. The words of the statute are as follows, to wit, “every person who shall buy or receive stolen goods, knowing the same to he stolen, shall upon conviction be punished,” &c. R. C. 1824, p. 140. In an indictment, every material fact ought to he alleged with the certainty of time and place; and every fact is material, which is necessary to constitute the crime charged in the indictment. That the goods mentioned were stolen goods, and that the defendant received them, knowing them to he such, were material facts to he alleged and proved; because they are the facts which constitute the offence: hut the time and place of stealing the goods need not be alleged; because the defendant is not charged with the larceny. If it were necessary, by averment and proof, to connect the time and place of the stealing with the act of receiving, it would, for the same reason, he necessary also to connect the same circumstances with his knowledge of the fact, that the goods were stolen. If such were the law, no offender could he convicted, under this statute, without proof, not only of his having received stolen goods, knowing them to be such, but also of his knowledge of the precise time and place of the original larceny. And yet it is easy to conceive a case, in which a man might be guilty of the offence of knowingly receiving stolen goods, without either the offender, or the witnesses, having any knowledge of the time and place of the felonious taking. If these positions he correct, it clearly follows that any evidence which might have arisen in this case, going to show the time and place of the original larceny, was unnecessary to support the charge in the indictment.

Howard, for the plaintiff.

Whitcomb, for the state.

Per Curiam.

The judgment is affirmed with costs.  