McClelland v. State

114 A. 584, 138 Md. 533, 1921 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 14, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 114 A. 584 (McClelland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClelland v. State, 114 A. 584, 138 Md. 533, 1921 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

There are; one hundred and one bills of exceptions in this record, hut they are mainly concerned with only two general questions of evidence. The appellant was indicted for the larceny of a diamond brooch. Upon his trial in the court below he wasi found guilty by the verdict of a jury and was sentenced to imprisonment for three years in the Maryland Penitentiary.' Before the exceptions reserved a,t the trial are considered, the effect of the evidence to which no objection was made will be stated. The accused did not testify, and no evidence on his behalf was offered.

The brooch in question was stolen from the retail store of the A. H. Fetting Jewelry Manufacturing Company, on Liberty Street, in the City of Baltimore. It was in a tray of *535 jewelry which was. shown to the appellant, on June 12th, 1919, and when the tray was afterwards examined the brooch was found to be missing, although it bad not been sold. On May 24th the appellant had brought a ring to the store to be repaired, and. when he called there on June 12th he was informed that the ring would he. ready for him on the next. day. Lie did not return for it until the following March. Subsequently he was arrested, as were also his son and a, young woman by the name of Miss Cook, and all were indicted jointly for the larceny. In an interview at police headquarters, Miss C'ook slated in the presence of the appellant that on June 12th, 1919, after having come from New York to Baltimore with the appellant and hisi son in an automobile, she was left by them in the car on Fayette Street, and upon their return, after being absent for a considerable period of time, the appellant threw a, small jewelry box into the oar, and they afterwards went to New York, where she pawned for the appellant, a. brooch which she identified, from, a drawing made by Mr. Netting, as. the one stolen from his. company’s store. By the appellant’s direction, she said, the brooch was pawned by her under a fictitious name. After denying when arrested that be had given Miss Cook any jewelry to pawn, the appellant admitted, in view of her statement made in his presence, that what she had siaid was. true, file offered to plead guilty if he “could get ten months,” but he was told that he could be given no such assurance.

A number of the exceptions were taken to the admission of evidence tending to prove that the appellant stole other articles of jewelry from the store of the Netting Company in the course of a series of visits there beginning; May 24th, 1919, wheii he left the ring to be repaired, and ending on June 12th, when the. larceny of the diamond brooch is alleged to have occurred. The proof introduced over1 these objections was to the effect that Miss. Cook received from the appellant, and pawned under assumed names at his instance, other jewels stolen from the store during the period of Ms visits there, and that he admitted at police headquarters the truth of her *536 statement as to his having delivered those articles to her for the purpose she described. This evidence tended to prove that the larceny charged in the indictment was one of a connected series of crimes of that nature, committed by the appellant in the execution of a continuous scheme of theft, depending upon the opportunity provided by the transaction in reference to the repair of the ring, and characterized by the employment of an unvarying method and agency for the disposal of the stolen property. For the purpose of proving a common design or system, in pursuance of which the crime charged in the indictment was perpetrated, the evidence to which the group of exceptions under consideration referred was properly admitted. While ordinarily proof of another larceny by the accused is not received -to establish his guilt as to the one for which he is indicted, yet such evidence is admissible “where it bears -on the issues in the case on trial” as “where the evidence of such other offense shows or' tends to show intent, motive, guilty knowledge, or a common scheme, plan, or system..” 16 C. J. 603. In a note to the case of State v. Gillies, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 776, on the subject of “Evidence of other crimes in prosecutions for larceny,” it is said: “Evidence of other offenses is sometimes admitted for the .purpose of showing that the act charged was part of a series of similar offenses to show common purpose or system, or because the crime offered in evidence was part of a common scheme or plan to commit the larceny charged.” The annotation refers to a number of cases in which that principle has been applied. Earlier decisions on the subject are collected in a note to People v. Molineux, 62 L. R. A. 231, et seq.

In Avery v. State, 121 Md. 231; Luery v. State, 116 Md. 289, and Lamb v. State, 66 Md. 287, the opinions cite the case of Rex v. Ellis, 6 B. & C. 145, in which a shopman was indicted for robbing his employer’s money drawer of a certain sum of money on a stated day, and evidence that the accused had robbed the drawer at other times was admitted on the theory that the several felonies were connected and .formed part of one entire transa,ction. This general princi *537 pie is also recognized in Meno v. State, 117 Md. 435, and Freud v. State, 129 Md. 644.

The testimony of Miss Cook, and her statement proven to have been made in the appellant’s presence, included general allusions to her frequent receipt of jewelry from him for the purpose of having it pawned. There was no proof as to how or where he had obtained any of the jewelry so disposed of other than that taken from the store of the Eetting Company. But in every instance, according to the testimony, the articles were pawned under a fictitious name by the appellant’s direction. When asked at police headquarters what he had to say in regard to Miss Cook’s statement that he had sent her numerous packages of jewelry with instructions to pawn them, but not in her right name, the appellant’s reply was in effect an admission that the jewelry had been stolen. Objection was made to the proof of the general course of dealing to which the testimony thus excepted to referred. It was precisely the same devious course by which the appellant was-shown to have disposed of the diamond brooch mentioned in the indictment, and the evidence tended to prove the existence of a definite and characteristic system under which his opei’ations were conducted. tinder the special circumstances we do> not regard the admission of this proof as reversible error.

A more difficult question is presented by another class of exceptions. They relate to the admission of testimony as to certain statements made by the appellant’s son, who had been jointly indicted with his father for the larceny of the brooch, and had submitted hisi case for trial by the court, their co-defendant, Miss Cook, having entered a plea of guilty of receiving stolen goods, under one of the counts of the indictment, and having' become a witness for the State. The son bore the name of Bothery, while the father was known as McClelland.

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Bluebook (online)
114 A. 584, 138 Md. 533, 1921 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclelland-v-state-md-1921.