People v. Williams

118 N.W.2d 391, 368 Mich. 494
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1962
DocketDocket 54, Calendar 49,599
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 118 N.W.2d 391 (People v. Williams) 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. Williams, 118 N.W.2d 391, 368 Mich. 494 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

*496 Dethmers, J.

Defendants were convicted of larceny in a building. The parties agree that the applicable statute is CL 1948, § 750.360 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev §28.592), which reads:

“Any person who shall commit the crime of larceny by stealing in any dwelling house, house trailer, •office, store, gasoline service station, shop, warehouse, mill, factory, hotel, school, barn, granary, ship, boat, .vessel, chur.ch, house of worship, locker room or any building psed by the public shall be guilty of a felony.”

The structure in which the people allege the larceny occurred is described as being 7 feet, 7 inches high, 15 feet, 1 inch long, and 33 inches wide. According to the owner’s testimony it is constructed of metal, attáched to the land, bolted down to cement, entirely enclosed, a covered shed, it has overlapping doors with a steel bar coming down through the outside door and a padlock attached through the* steel rod. In it tires were stored and displayed in 2 tiers, with a capacity for 100 tires. It had been constructed on the premises and located about 38 feet from the main gasoline service station building located on the same premises. On the night in question the doors had been closed and locked, but afterwards the mentioned rod on the door had been sawed apart, the lock removed, the door opened, and -5 tires taken.

Is the. structure in which the larceny was committed a building within the meaning oh the quoted statute? Defendants .say it is merely a tire rack. They suggest that it comes within the meaning óf CL 1948, § 750.114 (Stat Ann § 28.309), making it a misdemeanor to break.,and- enter, with intent to commit the crime of larceny, “any outside show case or other outside enclosed counter ■ used for the display of goods.” We think the .structure here involved is considerably more than á show case or counter in the ordinarily'accepted sense of the terms.- •■ • ■

*497 Defendants cite Rouse v. Catskill & N. Y. Steamboat Co., 59 Hun (66 SC NY) 80 (13 NYS 126), in which it was held that a vessel is not a building within the meaning of an ordinance prohibiting the sale of liquor in a building; Town of Union v. Ziller, 151 Miss 467 (118 So 293, 60 ALR 1155), in which a metal billboard was held not to be a building under an ordinance prohibiting metal buildings; Truesclell v. Gay, 79 Mass 311, in which a wall around 3 sides of the stack of an iron furnace to protect the stack from earth sliding down a hill behind it is not a building within the lien law, to permit a lien to attach to it; Whiteley v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 113 Md 541 (77 A 882), in which it was held that, in a street opening proceeding in which it was required that a map be filed showing lots and buildings to be taken, it was not necessary to show a portable schoolhouse thereon because it was intended to be there only temporarily and was not a building to be taken or destroyed for the street opening; Bailey v. Ohio, 26 Ohio Cir Ct 375, in which a chicken coop 37-3/4 inches by 38 inches by 2 feet high, which was moved from place to place and not attached to the ground, was not a building within the meaning of a statute defining burglary as breaking and entering any building, because lacking any permanency of location as a structure. These are of scant assistance to defendants here with respect to the structure of the size, permanent character and type of- construction and attachment to the realty here involved.

In Trues dell the following was said:

“The word ‘building’ cannot be held to include every species of erection on land, such as fences, gates or other like structures. Taken in its broadest sense, it can mean only an erection intended for use and occupation as a habitation or for some purpose of trade, manufacture, ornament or use, constituting *498 a fabric or edifice, such as a house, a store, a church, a shed.”

This structure comes well within this definition of a building.

In Sanchez v. People, 142 Colo 58 (349 P2d 561, 78 ALR2d 775), we find in the syllabi (P2d) the following:

“1. All stationary structures within State, no matter of what subtance they may be constructed, are within term ‘building’ as used in burglary statute, so long as they are designed for use in position in which they are fixed.”

“2. Although a telephone booth may be only a closet by dictionary definition when within another structure, it is a ‘building’ within purview of burglary statute when set apart.”

“4. Under statute defining burglary as entry with felonious intent into any building, defendant who was prying cover off coin box in outside telephone booth was guilty of ‘burglary.’ ”

By the same token, whatever term might be applicable to the structure here involved if it were inside another building, set apart and outside, as it was, it was a building within the meaning of the applicable • statute.

Was evidence taken by officers from defendants’ car (5 automobile tires) unlawfully seized and, therefore, should it have been suppressed as such upon defendants’ motion to suppress filed and heard by the court in advance of trial?

At the preliminary examination the arresting officer testified, in substance, that at about 3 -.30 a.m., while assigned to scout a certain area, he received radio instructions to go to a specific location because of a report of the presence there of a suspicious looking man; that the officer went as directed and saw a citizen on the sidewalk who told him that he had seen a suspicious man rolling a new, packaged or wrapped *499 tire on the street toward an automobile still parked nearby and that tbe man had placed the tire either in the trunk or under the rear end of the car; that he, the officer, thought this might mean that the tire had been stolen because at that hour of the night no tire sales place was open in that neighborhood in which a new tire might be purchased; that, in consequence, he shined a flashlight into the car and found the 2 defendants hiding in the front of the car, lying in a prone position; that he thought the tire might be in the car; that he then asked for the key to'the trunk, but defendants said they had not had one for years; that the officer asked the male defendant what he had done with the tire he had been rolling down the street and that he denied having it; that he then arrested defendants and searched them; that in the male defendant’s pocket he found a pair of pliers, a paring knife, tan gloves, and a hacksaw; that after taking defendants and the car a report came about the 5 tires having been stolen from the structure above described; that thereafter the officers gained access to the trunk through the rear seat and found 5 new tires later identified by the owner as those taken from said structure, the tires having marked thereon the name and location of another gasoline station in which he was a partner.

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Bluebook (online)
118 N.W.2d 391, 368 Mich. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-williams-mich-1962.