People v. Sekeson

111 A.D. 490, 20 N.Y. Crim. 24, 97 N.Y.S. 917, 18 N.Y. Ann. Cas. 199, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 205
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 9, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 A.D. 490 (People v. Sekeson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Sekeson, 111 A.D. 490, 20 N.Y. Crim. 24, 97 N.Y.S. 917, 18 N.Y. Ann. Cas. 199, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 205 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Patterson, J.:

The defendant was indicted for the crime of grand larceny in the first degree, and upon trial in the Court of General Sessions of the Peace in and for the City and County of New York was found guilty of the charge. There were two counts in the indictment; the first charging him with feloniously stealing, taking and carrying away on the 11th day of July, 1903, a number of articles of jewelry, the property of one Joseph Rosenthal; the second with feloniously receiving and having in his possession the property alleged in the first count tó have been feloniously stolen, taken and carried away. The prosecution abandoned the second count. Among the articles charged to have been stolen by the defendant was a pin of the value of $550. It was a bar diamond pin. There was another pin mentioned in the indictment — bearing the letters “ Y. P. C.” It was a badge of membership of a club called the “Young Potomac Cadets ” and was of trifling value. While the general drift of the evidence on the part of the prosecution tended to show that the defendant originally might have taken all the articles enumerated in the indictment, yet the case seems to have gone to the jury finally upon the question of the theft of the diamond pin only, the learned recorder stating in his charge that “ if the diamond pin in question belonged to the complaining witness and the defendant intending to deprive the complaining witness of its possession took it away, he stole it and is guilty of larceny.”

It seeins to be plain that during the trial and in the ultimate pre=sentation of the case to the jury, the guilt or innocence of the defendant was made to depend upon his felonious or innocent possession of this one selected, particular article, mentioned in the indictment, although it was charged to have been taken from a box in a safe in which all the abstracted articles were kept. The principal witness for the prosecution was Joseph Rosenthal, who testified that he was the owner of the jewelry mentioned in the indictment, all of it having been a gift from his mother; that it was kept in a box in a large safe" in the jewelry store of his father at No. 254 Bowery in-the city of New York; that the defendant was his intimate friend and very close social relations existed between them, as well ás between the families of which they were respectively members ; that the defendant frequently spent the night with the witness, [492]*492sleeping in apartments above the store. Eosenthal, Sr:,, had sustained injuries due to an accident and went to the upper part of the city to the house of his brother, whereupon the witness 'invited the-defendant to' stay "with him while his father was sick. The invitation was accepted, and the defendant ■ slept in the same room with the witness, going into the store every day. This witness also-testified that on July 8, 1903, he showed all of, the jewelry mentioned1 in. the indictment to the defendant; that the diamond pin was there and also the “ Y. P. 0.” pin and,that he put all of the jewelry back in the-box in-the presence of the defendant. The witness did not look at the box again Until the fourteenth of July— six days after he states he showed it to the- defendant. The key Of the safe the " witness kept- on a bunch of keys, which,: after showing the defendant, the jewelry, he threw Upon a" desk in front of the. safe and behincf the counter. When the witness undertook on the fourteenth to open the safe he found the key was missing from the ring.. The safe then was forced open and it was discovered that the jewelry, was. gone.' He states that he notified the defendant, who said,. “ Don’t worry, they must be around here some place.” Search was made through the store for the missing articles and detectives were employed to aid in that search. On -the fifteenth of July the defendant came to the store, took off his coat and hung it up in a room back of the store and put on another coa-t and went away. One of the officers suggested that the pockets of the coat which the defendant had.taken off -and hung up should bé examined. The witness says he looked in. the póckét and found.in one of them the “ Y. P. C.”.pin, which-he-insists was'his pin, and that- the defendant returning, asked if the jewelry had be.en found, and he was told- it had not. He was not informed that the pin last mentioned had been found in the pocket of his. coat. He then assisted- in the search. Meantime,' according to the statements of young Eosenthal, a thorough search ' had been- made through the whole premises without success, and on-tlie'seventeenth of July, the deféndant being with him up stairs, declared that the jewelry must be somewhere around', and Went to the office and in about twenty minutes returned with a handful of jewelry, saying “ I found' the jewelry.” He laid, it on a trunk and the witness- says he asked the defendant to go down stairs ■ and show where he found it. They went down and the defend[493]*493ant pointed to a spot which the witness says he and his uncle no less than thrée times had examined. The defendant brought up all the jewelry, except a couple of small pieces. Everybody congratulated the defendant, and then he'was told that the large diamond pin was missing, and Rosenthal, Jr., swears that the defendant said .it was odd that that pin should not be found .with the rest of the goods, as it was there. It was subsequently traced to a pawnbroker’s office, and it sufficiently appears in the proof that the defendant took it there apd pawned it in the name of “ Kahn.” Evidently all the. articles mentioned in the indictment, with the exception, perhaps, of one or two very small ones and the large diamond pin, were recovered by or restored to the owner on the seventeenth of July.

Two witnesses for the prosecution, namely,.Krauch and Firneisen, police officers, corroborated the story of Joseph Rosenthal relating to the discovery of the “ Y. P. 0.” pin in the pocket of the defendant’s coat. Krouch’s connection with the case began on the fifteenth of July. He testified that he was present when the small pin was discovered, and also that he had searched the place at which-the defendant stated he found the other jewelry. He made the arrest of the defendant, stating to him that.it was for stealing the jewelry at Rosenthal’s. He asked the defendant if he ever owned a silver badge with “ Y. P. C.” on it, and the defendant said, “ Ho.” The defendant asked if he could talk with Joseph Rosenthal and was told he could. This witness then states the conversation. He says that the defendant asked Rosenthal, “ what do you want from me ? ” and Rosenthal "replied that he wanted “that three-stone pin that you took.” The defendant said he did not take it. Rosenthal said, “Yes, yon did. * * * I am not doing this for your sake, but I am doing it for your family’s sake, and I want it.” The defendant said, “ The pin is all right.” Then this officer remarked, “What do you mean, all right?” The defendant said, “Well, * * * the pin is pawned,” and stated that he pawned it the day after the jewelry was found; that he kept the pin and pawned it in the name of “ Kahn,” and received $150. This witness also testified that he discovered at the pawnbroker’s that it had been pledged on the eleventh of July, which is the day on which the larceny was .committed as charged in the indictment. After the arrest this [494]*494officer had a further conversation with the defendant. The court remarked that if the conversation did not • relate to the transaction the witness should not narrate it. He testified that it related to jewelry which had been taken previously a pair of earrings. Another witness, Pirneisen, testified to a general search that had been made through the apartments for the jewelry.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A.D. 490, 20 N.Y. Crim. 24, 97 N.Y.S. 917, 18 N.Y. Ann. Cas. 199, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sekeson-nyappdiv-1906.