People v. Taranski

37 N.W.2d 101, 324 Mich. 132, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 422
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1949
DocketDocket No. 81, Calendar No. 43,934.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 N.W.2d 101 (People v. Taranski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Taranski, 37 N.W.2d 101, 324 Mich. 132, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 422 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Bruno Taranski appeals from a judgment of conviction of the crime of breaking and entering a building in the nighttime with intent to commit a- larceny therein. Defendants, Edward Collins and Joseph Zakrzewski, who were tried and convicted at the same time as coconfederates, have not appealed. The prosecution agreed at the trial *135 not to refer to the various aliases set forth in the indictment to describe appellant.

It is necessary to give some of the pertinent facts as brought out by the testimony in order to discuss appellant’s claims of error made. The conviction is based on the testimony of one Casimir Wiliwis, certain exhibits, and circumstantial evidence. The people made the following showing, mostly by the testimony of Wiliwis. Appellant, Collins and Zakrzewski, together with Wiliwis, planned and executed a burglary at a store of the McLean Motor Sales, Inc., 2340 West Grand Boulevard, Detroit, Michigan. To commit the crime they drove to the premises in a new Packard car, in which there was a sledge hammer, an acetylene torch with which to cut metal, a wrecking bar, rollers to facilitate the moving of a safe, a pistol, a revolver, a rifle, and other small tools. Wiliwis is a self-admitted confederate of the other parties involved. He had known Collins approximately 24 years, Zakrzewski some 20 years, and Taranski 10 or 11 months. The crime was committed during the very early hours of Monday, August 26, 1946, although the parties met late at night on Sunday, August 25,1946. About 5 days prior thereto defendant Collins met Wiliwis and invited him to join the other defendants to go out on “a job.” Wiliwis agreed to go along after discussing the feelings of the others towards him. On August 23, 1946, he and Zakrzewski looked over the premises and the safe therein of the McLean Motor Sales office. On August 25, 1946, the four men met in the vicinity of a garage where a Packard car had been placed. The garage opens on an alley between Taylor and Hazelwood avenues, which extends easterly from Hamilton avenue through Third and Second avenues in Detroit. Wiliwis drove his car to the place of meeting with defendant Collins; Zakrzewski and Taranski arrived in another car. *136 After parking their cars they went to the garage facing on the alley not far from Third avenue and .drove away in the large new Packard car. Collins ■evidently had the key to the garage; it was a private garage that had been rented from the occupant of .the house located in front of the garage.

The front seat' had been removed from the Packard car and a bucket seat was substituted for it, thus leaving ample room in the front of the car. The parties rode in the car to the McLean Motor Sales place of business and parked it in a driveway near the doors. Taranski and Collins broke down the doors and entered the building to remove the safe. Wiliwis, armed with a loaded gun, remained outside as a lookout man, while Zakrzewski remained behind the wheel of the Packard with its motor running. Photographs of the car, the 3 guns, and also numerous tools and equipment that were in the car at that time and at the time of the arrest were introduced in evidence. Wiliwis further stated that they drove off after the safe was removed and placed in the car. The safe, however, took up so ■much room that they could not close the door of the Packard. They therefore removed the rear seat cushion to enable them to shut the door, and threw it in the street not far from the scene of the crime. The cushion was recovered and also introduced as an exhibit at the trial. They drove outside of the city of Detroit in order to reach some place where they could open the safe without being detected. They stopped on a dirt road in Oak Park and removed the safe from the car. Oak Park adjoins Detroit. While they were in the act of opening the safe and after they had already broken off the handle with a sledge hammer, an Oak Park police car drove up without lights. Its headlights were turned ■on as it approached the Packard. Seeing the police ■car, someone shouted “Police,” and all, except Wi-li *137 wis, immediately left in the Packard car. Wiliwis ran through the woods to the Six-Mile road where he caüght a Detroit city bus which he took to the place where he had parked his car. He found Collins there waiting for him. The safe was recovered by the Oak Park police and turned over to the Detroit police.

In a manner undisclosed by the record, the police on learning of a Packard car in a garage in the rear of the house at 812 Hazelwood avenue placed a watch there in order to apprehend anyone who entered the garage. About 3:00 a.m. on August 30, 1946, a coupe .drove up near the alley; two men got out and carried a 5-gallon can to the garage. They then returned to the coupe and drove away but soon returned.' The police also saw a second car draw up and park near the coupe. The Packard was then driven out of the garage and was gone about 45 minutes. The police had observed the Packard being driven on Taylor avenue, where it stopped and let 2 men out who were identified as Taranski and Wiliwis. Wiliwis was arrested as he entered the coupe which belonged to him. Collins was arrested as he crossed the street and a key fitting in the lock of the garage where the Packard was kept was found in his possession. Zakrzewski got into his own car and picked up Taranski at the corner of Third and Hazelwood and the police followed them. On being-unsuccessful in forcing them to the curb because of heavy traffic the police fired a shot at the tires. This brought the car to a stop, and Zakrzewski and Taranski were arrested. The Packard, together with the guns, tools and other articles found therein were identified by the arresting- officers and also by Wiliwis and admitted into evidence. An extremely important piece of evidence was an exhibit consisting of a piece of rubber found by the police in Oak Park near where the stolen safe had been .lying when *138 taken ont of the Packard. The police evidently suspected that the piece of rubber had been broken off from the rubber mat on the running board of the Packard. They sent the piece of rubber and the rubber mat to the Department of Justice in Washington, D. C., where a special agent of the F. B. I. made an analysis and reported that the piece of rubber had come off the mat. The analyst stated that one would not have to be an expert to be able to match the exhibits. ■

An unsuccessful effort was made by the defendants to have the names of 4 witnesses stricken from the information. The testimony that these witnesses were to give was to show that the Packard, the license plates used on it, and the guns had been stolen at an earlier date. The testimony of one of these witnesses was completely stricken from tlie record at the trial as it was not tied up with any of the exhibits. . Defendant claims that it was prejudicial that this witness was even allowed to testify. There is not sufficient merit in this claim to necessitate any discussion. See People v. Podsiad, 295 Mich. 541. Another witness who identified an exhibit, consisting of a Savage automatic rifle, was asked on cross-examination how many guns he had in his store of the type of the exhibit.

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Related

People v. Neal
155 N.W.2d 239 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.W.2d 101, 324 Mich. 132, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-taranski-mich-1949.