Blusinsky v. Commonwealth

144 S.W.2d 1038, 284 Ky. 395, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 506
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 12, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 144 S.W.2d 1038 (Blusinsky v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blusinsky v. Commonwealth, 144 S.W.2d 1038, 284 Ky. 395, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 506 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Reversing.

The grand jury of Jefferson county on June 15, 1938, returned an indictment against George Blusinsky' charging him with the crime of unlawfully and feloniously receiving stolen property of the value of more than $20. At the trial held December 5, 1938, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and fixed the defendant’s punishment at confinement in the state penitentiary for a period of two years. On December 7, 1938, the defend *397 ant moved the court to withhold the rendition of the judgment, and the following order was entered:

“The court being sufficiently advised ordered that said motion be and is sustained on condition that defendant remains on good behavior, and that said defendant shall not be guilty in the future of knowingly receiving any other stolen property."

On April 14, 1939, the grand jury of Jefferson county returned an indictment against George Blusinsky charging him with the crime of unlawfully and feloni-ously receiving stolen property, to wit: 323 pounds of aluminum foil of the value of $61.37, personal property of the Beynolds Metal Company. It was charged that the crime was committed on the-day of January, 1939. At his trial on May 12, 1939, he was convicted of the crime of receiving stolen property of the value of less than $20, and his punishment was fixed at confinement in the county jail for a period of 12 months. He was sentenced on the same day, and on May 16, 1939, the court sustained a motion to set aside the order suspending the sentence in the case tried December 5, 1938, and entered a judgment in that case sentencing the defendant to two years’ imprisonment in the state penitentiary. The defendant has appealed from both judgments. Motion that the two appeals be heard together has been sustained, and they will be disposed of in one opinion.

As grounds for reversal of the judgment sentencing him to 12 months in the county jail, the appellant insists that (1) the indictment is fatally defective; (2) the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; and (3) incompetent evidence prejudicial to his substantial rights was admitted over his objection.

The indictment was drawn under Section 1199 of the Kentucky Statutes, which reads:

“Whoever shall receive stolen goods, chattels or other thing, the stealing wiiereof is punished as a felony or misdemeanor, knowing the same to be stolen, shall be liable to the same punishment to which the person stealing the same is, by law, subjected. Such offenders may be convicted, though the principal offender has not been convicted. The possession of any stolen goods shall be prima facie *398 evidence of the guilt, under this section, of any person or persons having such possession.”

The accusatory part of the indictment accused Blusinsky “of the crime of unlawfully and feloniously receiving stolen property of value, the stealing whereof is punished as a felony, knowing the same to have been stolen." In the descriptive portion it was charged that Blusinsky “did unlawfully and feloniously receive from Dewey Keith, 323 pounds of aluminum foil, of the value of $61.37, the personal property of Reynolds Metal Company * * * which lately before had been unlawfully and feloniously taken, stolen and carried away by the said Dewey Keith from said Reynolds Metal Company, with the fraudulent intent then and there to convert same to his own use and to permanently deprive the owner of its property therein, the sard George Blusinsky then and there well knowing that said property, the stealing whereof is punished as a felony, had been unlawfully and feloniously stolen by the said Dewey Keith, etc.”

The criticism leveled at the indictment is that it failed to charge that the taking of the property by Dewey Keith was against the will or without the consent of the owner, and Cohan v. Commonwealth, 262 Ky. 80, 89 S. W. (2d) 872, is cited by appellant in support of his contention that such failure rendered the indictment fatally defective and that his demurrer should have been sustained. A comparison of the indictment in the Cohan case with the one in the present case discloses that they are substantially alike, except that in the Cohan case the indictment charged the accused with the crime of unlawfully and feloniously receiving property which had been stolen by one Thomas Wills from the Louisville. & Nashville Railroad Company, the said Cohan well knowing that said property had been unlawfully and feloniously stolen by the said Wills. Theft of property in the custody of a common carrier is made a felony by Section 1201b, Kentucky Statutes. In the opinion in the Cohan case it was said:

“The failure to charge in the indictment that the property was taken against the will and without the consent of the owner renders it fatally defective as to the crime of grand larceny.”

And further along in the opinion it was said:

*399 “To sustain a conviction of Cohan it was indispensably necessary for the commonwealth to allege in the indictment and to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the essential facts showing Wills’ guilt of the crime of either grand larceny or of a felony under Section 1201b and Cohan’s guilt under Section 1199.”

In support of the statement in the opinion that it was necessary to charge in the indictment that the property was taken against the will or without the consent of the owner, Page v. Commonwealth, 235 Ky. 657, 32 S. W. (2d) 17, Maggard v. Commonwealth, 257 Ky. 414, 78 S. W. (2d) 315, and Lanham v. Commonwealth, 250 Ky. 500, 63 S. W. (2d) 585, were cited. The Page, Maggard, and Lanham cases all involved indictments for grand larceny, and obviously the court in the Cohan case confused such indictments with indictments under Section 1199 of the Statutes for the crime of knowingly receiving stolen property. The opinion failed to notice earlier opinions construing Section 1199 which held that in an indictment under that section the same degree of accuracy required in an indictment for the original larceny is not demanded.

In Newton v. Commonwealth, 158 Ky. 4, 164 S. W. 108, 109, Newton was indicted under Section 1199 of the Kentucky Statutes. The indictment merely charged that the accused had unlawfully and feloniously received seven wagons which had theretofore been stolen from the Owensboro Wagon Company knowing at the time he received said wagons that they had been stolen. The indictment neither named the thief nor charged that the property was taken against the will or without the consent of the owner. Numerous criticisms of the indictment were made, but the court held that it was sufficient, and, in the course of its opinion, said:

“The gravamen of the offense denounced by this statute is knowingly receiving stolen goods, and is a separate and distinct offense from the larceny itself. Keeping this in mind, the five objections to the sufficiency of the indictment will be considered.
“It is first urged that there is no sufficient description of the larceny of the wagons alleged to have been received by appellant, and no sufficient al *400

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.W.2d 1038, 284 Ky. 395, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blusinsky-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1940.