State v. Lehlan

Ladd, J.

1. Criminal Law conspiracy : evidence of co-conspirator. I. The defendant and one Harry Borsky, alias Ike Polsky, were jointly indicted for the larceny of several bolts of silk from the store of Welsh-Cook Company in Cedar Rapids. The defendant elected to be tried separately, and argues that the court erred in receiving testimony of the acts and declarations of Borsky in promotion of an alleged conspiracy to steal silks from said store. The evidence tended to show that he and Borsky had registered under assumed names at the Grand Hotel September 18, 1911, and had occupied the same room until the afternoon of September 20th; that on September 19th at about 12:30 o’clock defendant went to the second floor of said store and stood at the silk counter for a few minutes examining the silk and looking about the room, observed a clerk leave for lunch,, and talked with the one remaining, followed him to the blanket counter, and told him he would not wait longer for his uncle, and requested the clerk, if his uncle came, to say he would be back about 1:30 o’clock. He did not return, but on the next day Borsky and Robinson came at about the same time — that is, 12:30 o’clock — the former bringing from his room at the hotel a large satchel. This was set down at the top of the *185stairs, and they advised the manager who had followed them that the firm of Robinson & Cone was transferring a stock from Sioux City to Davenport and they would like to look at blankets. Borsky represented himself as Cone and started for the blanket department with the only clerk on that floor; the other having departed for lunch, as on the day previous. Robinson talked with the sales manager for a few minutes, when the latter returned to the first floor. After looking at blankets near by, Borsky asked to see the woolen blankets, and the clerk took him to a distant part of the floor out of view of the silk counter, and there the latter examined the stock for ten or fifteen minutes. But he did not buy then, as his store was not ready. Requesting a list with prices and the clerk’s name, he said he had not had dinner, and he would have to go, shook hands with the clerk several times, took his satchel, and departed down the elevator with Robinson. In the afternoon the clerk who had stepped out to lunch discovered that about fourteen bolts of silk were missing. On the afternoon of September 21st, at about 2:30 o’clock, Borsky called at the dry goods department of Rudge-Gunsel Company in Lincoln, Neb., and began negotiating for the sale of silks which he claimed to have received in a trade and later submitted samples of silks like those stolen. The buyer insisted upon seeing the goods. A deal was not made, but he saw Borsky and defendant together at the Lincoln Hotel the next morning. The defendant registered at the Savoy House at that place in the afternoon of the 22d and remained until the 25th, Borsky sharing his room, and on the later date they left and were seen thereafter entering the Star Rooming House, joining the hotel, two or three times. They were arrested at' about 2 o ’clock in the morning of September 27, 1911, and] upon searching room sixty-one of the Star Boarding House, the satchel Borsky had at the store in Cedar Rapids and several bolts of silk missed therefrom were found. A collar of size suitable for defendant was found in a hand bag in the room. From this evidence, the jury might well have inferred the existence of a scheme or *186plan between Borsky and defendant to. commit the offense, and,' this being so, the rulings by which testimony.of the acts and, declarations of Borsky in promotion thereof was rightiy admitted.

2. Same : hearing say evidence: prejudice. II. John Schmitt, after testifying that he was a police officer of Lincoln, Neb., and. that he was detailed to arrest defendant and locate the stolen silk, was asked to “state whether or not prior to that time (-when they were arrested) you had heard Lehlan and Polsky were occupying room sixty-one at the Star Rooming House.” An objection “as calling for hearsay, immaterial, leading, and suggestive,” was overruled, and the witness answered, “Yes, sir,” and proceeded to testify of having searched the room. A similar question was propounded to W. T. Deveresse, the Omaha detective who located the alleged culprits, and over a like objection he answered in the affirmative. Had other evidence of such occupancy of the designated room been conclusive, the admission of this testimony as explaining the occasion for searching the room might not have been regarded as prejudicial; but no testimony was- adduced tending to show that défendant or Borsky was ever in the room, save the finding in a grip of a collar which fitted defendant and the satchel previously seen in Borsky’s possession. The room then could not properly have been assumed to have been in their occupancy, and this hearsay evidence might have and doubtless was given consideration by the jury in passing on this issue. The rulings were erroneous.

3. Same : instructions. III. There was no error in refusing to instruct, as requested by defendant, that the jury could not “find defendant guilty on account of any act of his done after September 20, 1911,” for the jury was told that, unless found guilty of the larceny of the silk committed by some one on that day, he should be acquitted. This sufficiently guarded against the possibility of conviction for receiving stolen goods.

4. Same : larceny : recent possession of stolen property : evidence : instruction. IV. The seventh instruction given read: “It is a rule *187that the unexplained possession of property .recently stolen is presumptive evidence that the person in whose possession it is so found stole it; and if you find in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt, that shortly after the theft of the property described in the indictment, if there was a theft of it, or any portion of it was found in the possession of the defendant in Lincoln, Neb., or in the room which he was, or had been, occupying by himself or with his eodefendant, and such possession has not been satisfactorily explained, such possession would be presumptive evidence of the defendant’s guilt. And such presumption is not discharged or overcome by the fact that other goods not identified as belonging to the Welch-Cook Company were found at the same time and place.”

Though it might have been inferred that defendant was stopping at the Star Boarding House, there was no showing that he occupied room sixty-one when there. The mere fact that a sixteen-inch collar was found in a grip in that room and that defendant wore collars of that size was not alone sufficient to warrant such conclusion.

Another reason for disapproving this instruction is that it declares that the finding of the stolen property in the room occupied by himself and Borsky would afford presumptive evidence of guilt. This is not so unless the jury also found that the two were acting in concert, for the silks were,found in the satchel identified as the one Borsky had had in the store. As these were in Borsky’s recent possession, to render this binding on defendant as furnishing presumptive evidence of guilt against him, it must also have appeared that he was acting in concert with Borsky. People v. Niclosi, 34 Pac. 824; State v. Raymond, 46 Conn, 345; Porter v. People, 31 Colo. 508 (74 Pac. 879); States v. Phelps, 91 Mo. 478 (4 S. W. 119); State v. Wohlman, 34 Mo. 482 (86 Am. Dec. 117).

The requirement of such a finding was omitted from the instruction, and the error in so doing is not obviated by the previous instruction, as contended. Again, the possession is *188said to be presumptive evidence unless explained. As no explanation was attempted, this may not have been prejudicial error. Baldwin v. State, 31 Tex. Cr. R. 589 (21 S. W. 679); 25 Cyc. 152. But it will be as well to instruct more fully on another trial. State v. Bartlett, 128 Iowa, 518; State v. Kimes, 152 Iowa, 240.

The court did not caution the jury not to consider the evidence of acts and declarations of Borsky alone in determining whether there was a conspiracy between him and defendant. Whether this omission, in the absence of a request, was error, we need not now determine, but mention the matter that it may not be overlooked on another trial. — Reversed and Remanded. '