Goldman v. Commonwealth

42 S.E. 923, 100 Va. 865, 1902 Va. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 4, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 923 (Goldman v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldman v. Commonwealth, 42 S.E. 923, 100 Va. 865, 1902 Va. LEXIS 94 (Va. 1902).

Opinions

Whittle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error, R. A. Goldman, was jointly indicted along with S. Goldman, in the Hustings Court of the city of Roanoke, [878]*878for feloniously 'buying and receiving certain railroad brass, known as switch-locks, the property of the Norfolk and Western Railway Company, with intent to defraud. There was a demurrer and motion to quash the indictment, both of w'hich were overruled, and thereupon the prisoner, R. A. Goldman, pleaded not guilty. At the trial, the jury found the. prisoner guilty, as charged in the indictment, and fixed his punishment at sixty days in the city jail. .The court overruled the prisoner’s motion to set aside the verdict and grant him a new trial, and rendered judgment upon the verdict, and the case is here upon a writ of, error to that judgment.

Rrom the view taken of the case by this court, it is only necessary to notice the last assignment of error, which involves the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant a conviction of the prisoner of the felony of which he stands charged.

It will not be inappropriate in approaching the consideration of that question to do so in the light of certain well .settled principles of law which inhere in every prosecution against a citizen for crime.

It devolves upon the Commonwealth to prove, first, the corpus delicti, that is, the fact that the crime charged has been actually perpetrated; and, secondly, that it was committed by the accused. To justify a conviction, the evidence must be so convincing as to exclude every reasonable doubt of the guilt of the prisoner.

In McBride’s Case, 95 Va. 826, this court said: “The prisoner is presumed to be innocent until his guilt is established, and he is not to be prejudiced by the inability of the Commonwealth to point out any other criminal agent, nor is he called upon to vindicate his own innocence by naming the guilty man. He rests secure in that presumption of innocence until proof is adduced which establishes his guilt beyond a, reasonable doubt, and whether the proof be direct or circumstantial, it must be such as .excludes any rational hypothesis of the innocence of the prisoner.”

[879]*879In the ease in judgment, the corpus delicti is that the prisoner did “feloniously buy and receive twenty-eight pieces of railroad iron, brass, metal and composition thereof, and known as switch-locks, of the value of fifty cents each, being the goods and chattels ... of the Norfolk and Western Railway Company, a corporation, with intent feloniously to defraud.”

The act upon which the prosecution is based is found in section 3715 of the Code, as amended by Acts of 1889-’90, p. 30, which declares that “If any person buy or receive,” amongst other things, articles such as are described in the indictment, “with intent to defraud, he Shall be confined, in the penitentiary not less than one, nor more than two, years; or in the discretion of the jury, in jail not exceeding one year.” And the statute further provides that possession of such articles, so bought or received from any other person than the manufacturer thereof, or his authorized agent, or of a regularly licensed dealer therein, shall be prima facie evidence of such intent.

It will be observed that the statute does not declare that possession of the contraband articles shall be prima facie evidence, or, indeed, any evidence that they were bought or received from any other person than the manufacturer thereof, &c.; but that when so bought or received, possession shall 'be prima facie evidence of an intent to defraud. So that before any such presumption can arise from the possession of the articles, it is incumbent upon the Commonwealth to prove, as an essential element of the offence, that they were bought or received in the manner proscribed by the act. Upon that subject, there is no evidence in the record.

Nor does the evidence relied on for that purpose establish with that degree of conclusiveness required in criminal prosecutions,'that the Norfolk and Western Railway Company has lost any of its switch-looks, or that those described in the indictment are the property of that company. On the contrary, but two witnesses testify directly on that point. Neither proves that the [880]*880company Had lost any switch-locks, and both decline to positively identify the locks in question as the company’s property; although they testify to circumstances tending to support that theory. On the other hand, the witness -Beetcn, introduced by the Commonwealth, testifies that the Norfolk and Western Bail-road Company, the immediate predecessor of the Norfolk and Western Bailway Company, each having the same initials, “N. & W. B. B.,” used locks similar to the ones in question. Non constat but that these locks were the property of the old company, and not of its successor. It is true, another witness testifies that he unlocked two of these switch-locks with a key furnished him by a switch-tender of the Norfolk and Western Bail-way Company, but the same, doubtless, would have been the case with switch-locks of the old company of similar pattern.

It does not appear that the Norfolk and Western Bailway Company had ever missed any of its switch-locks. “Where the alleged owner thinks he has lost the property, but will not swear that he has, . . . the ownership is not, by this evidence, sufficiently proved.” 2 Bishop on Crim. Law, sec. 752. Such alleged owner could hardly expect a jury to find that his ownership of property was proved beyond a reasonable doubt, when his own doulbts were so great that he could neither, swear that he had lost, n-or that the property in question was his own.

The prosecution originated as follows: Some of the large brass lamps, belonging to the Norfolk and Western Bailway Company, had been stolen from its passenger cars, and the agents, suspecting that they might be found in the barrel of junk then in the freight depot, consigned in the name of S. Goldman, shipper, to the Ajax Metal Company, of Philadelphia, opened the barrel and discovered the articles described in the indictment.

Whilst the witness, Baldwin, a detective in the employment of the Norfolk and Western Bailway Company, testifies with characteristic zeal, in his effort to fix the guilt upon the accused, [881]*881a careful scrutiny of his evidence shows more or less conflict between it and that of other witnesses for the Commonwealth. These discrepancies are the proper subject of comment, and must impair the value of his testimony. At his instance, Officer Rigney accompanied him to the junk-shop of S. Goldman and was present at a conversation between him and the prisoner. Yet, so far as appears from his testimony, Rigney heard no admission from the prisoner that he bought and sold junk in S. Goldman’s shop, or that “he had bought no switch-looks except some brasses which he had gotten from a Showman,” as Baldwin testified. His testimony on that point is that prisoner stated that he had not bought any railroad locks, since Baldwin notified him not to do so, except a few which he got from Beeton, all of' which were broken. True, Rigney says, he was a few feet die-taut during part of the conversation between Baldwin and prisoner, but he certainly heard the question and 'answer referred to, and his testimony as to what that answer was is essentially different from that of Baldwin’s version of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 923, 100 Va. 865, 1902 Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldman-v-commonwealth-va-1902.