People v. . Doty

67 N.E. 303, 175 N.Y. 164, 17 N.Y. Crim. 366, 13 Bedell 164, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 964
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 19, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 303 (People v. . Doty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Doty, 67 N.E. 303, 175 N.Y. 164, 17 N.Y. Crim. 366, 13 Bedell 164, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 964 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Werner, J.:

The defendant was convicted of the crime of feloniously receiving stolen property, under an indictment charging him with having bought and received one cow hide of the value of $6 from one Louis Torge, Jr., on the 6th day of December, 1900, at the town of Salamanca, Cattaraugus county, which hide was then stolen property and by the defendant known to have been stolen. The judgment of con *367 viction was unanimously affirmed at the Appellate Division. The only question presénted on this appeal arises upon defendant’s exceptions to the rulings of the trial court, first in receiving, and thereafter in refusing to strike out, evidence of another purchase of stolen, property by the defendant from the same persons who had stolen the property specified in the indictment. The hide referred to in the indictment had been stolen from the tannery of the United States Leather Company, in Salamanca, by four school boys named Louis Torge, Jr., John Neugart, Clarence Ostler and Leon De Long, all of whom were under fifteen years of age, except Torge, who had just passed that age. None of the fathers of these boys were engaged in any business involving traffic in hides. The defendant was a harness maker and junk dealer, who bought and sold hides. These boys went to the defendant and asked him if he wanted to buy any hides. He replied that he would buy all they could bring, at six cents a. pound. Thereupon the boys went to the tannery of the Fisher Tanning Company and stole a' green hide, which they took to the defendant, who. weighed it and paid them six cents a pound. On the 6th day of December, 1900, which, was a. few days after the occurrence just described, the same boys again went to the defendant’s shop and asked him if he would buy more hides. Upon receiving an affirmative reply the boys repaired to the tannery of the United States Leather Company, also1 located in Salamanca, where they stole a Texas hide, which they took to the defendant, who received the same and paid for it at the rate of six cents per pound, although the market price of Texas hides was then eleven, cents per pound. In commercial parlance this Texas hide was what is known as a “ green hide,” but it had been removed from the animal in the. preceding August and was readily distinguishable from a fresh local hide, because it • was folded with the flesh side out and was free from moisture : except on the inside of the package, where it had been salted.

*368 At the trial the four boys first testified to the theft of the Texas hide specified in the indictment, and the sale thereof to the defendant. Then they were permitted to give evidence of their theft of the first hide from the Fisher Tanning Company and its sale to the defendant. The exceptions taken by the defendant to the rulings of the trial court in this behalf form the basis for this appeal.

The learned counsel for the defendant admits that under a charge of felonious receiving of stolen property, the guilty knowledge of a defendant may be established by evidence of other previous transactions of a. similar nature, but he argues that this is only permissible when the previous thefts, were of the same kind of property, committed by the same persons, from the same owners set forth in the 'indictment. In support of this argument he cites Rex v. Dunn & Smith (1 Moody C. C. 146); Coleman v. People (55 N. Y. 81); Copperman v. People (56 N. Y. 591), and People v. Grossman (168 N. Y. 51.)

The- reason for the rule under which evidence of other crimes is admissible to. prove the particular crime for which a defendant is on trial, is founded in the necessity for establishing criminal intent in cases where such intent may not be inferred from the commission of the single act charged in the indictment. Among the crimes of which criminal intent is an essential ingredient a.re the felonious receiving of stolen property, the passing of counterfeit money, obtaining money or property under false pretenses, and forgeries. In these classes of cases criminal intent cannot always be inferred from or proved by the act itself, and, therefore, resort must be had to other similar offenses to prove intent. The mere statement of' this rule is sufficient to show' that criminal intent in the commission of one act may not be predicated upon or inferred from the commission of another act or crime unless there is 'such a relation of time, place and circumstance between the *369 two acts that the proof of one logically tends to prove the intent and purpose underlying the other. When such a relation is shown, evidence which tends to prove the particular crime for which a defendant is on trial, is not incompetent because it incidentally proves the establishment of another crime. There is an infinite variety of time, place and circumstance in the commission of crime. A general rule like the one under consideration must be applied with intelligent caution to different conditions and in the light of particular facts. It is obvious that in its application to other crimes than that of receiving stolen property, the rule cannot be hedged about by arbitrary limitations that will fit all eases, and no such impossibility has ever been attempted by the courts. In the last analysis, therefore, the question here presented is whether the charge of receiving stolen property is one with reference to which the courts have adopted, or can adopt, an unvarying standard of proof. We do not think the cases referred to- by the learned counsel for the defendant subscribe to any such rule, although it must be admitted that there is such similarity of circumstance in them all as to furnish plausible ground for the argument that the elements of proof therein enumerated are indispensable in every case.

In Rex v. Dunn & Smith (supra.) the defendants were tried together, the first for larceny and the second for receiving stolen property. All the property received by Smith was stolen by Dunn from his employers. There were many distinct larcenies and receivings, which extended over a period of four or five months. When evidence was sought to be given against Smith of all the prior receivings by her, it was suggested that some of them were quite remote from the receiving upon which the prosecutor had elected to- proceed, but the court remarked that as all the property had been stolen from the same persons arid had all been brought to Smith by Dunn, it was proper, .to *370 submit the evidence to the jury upon the question of guilty knowledge. The Dunn case is referred to as a leading authority in Coleman v. People (supra). Coleman was tried upon the charge of having feloniously received certain pig iron, described in the indictment, which had been stolen from.one Burke. The district attorney was permitted to prove by one Briggs that he had lost a quantity of wrought iron bridge railing, which he afterwards found on Coleman’s premises. Briggs testified to a conversation with Coleman in which the latter admitted that he purchased the piece of bridge railing from some boys. This was held error because

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 303, 175 N.Y. 164, 17 N.Y. Crim. 366, 13 Bedell 164, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-doty-ny-1903.