Quinlan v. Commonwealth

149 S.W. 892, 149 Ky. 476, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 655
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 25, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 892 (Quinlan v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quinlan v. Commonwealth, 149 S.W. 892, 149 Ky. 476, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 655 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

' On December 5, 1909, the residence of Mrs. Leavell McCampbell, in the city of Louisville, was entered at night and a lot of silverware of the value of $250.00, the property of Mrs. McCampbell, stolen therefrom.

1 Thereafter the greater part of the silver, much battered and defaced, Was found in the possession of, and recovered from Meyers, a pawn-broker, to whom it had been first pawned and then sold. Appellant, Clifford’ Quinlan and one W. J.-Willis, were jointly indicted for the theft of this property, the charge being grand l'arceny. ■

' We are not advised as to whether or not Willis has been tried, but appellant was tried and convicted and [477]*477his punishment fixed by- the verdict of the jury, at confinement in the penitentiary for the term of three years. As the crime charged was committed before the present indeterminate punishment statute became a law, appellant’s punishment was properly fixed by the jury as provided by the statute then in force. He complains of the judgment, and of the refusal of the circuit court to grant him a new trial. Hence-this appeal.

'His chief complaint is that the evidence did not warrant his conviction and that the court should have given a peremptory instruction directing his acquittal by the jury. The evidence upon which, appellant was convicted was, in brief, that the silver exhibited on the trial as the subject of the larceny, was fully identified as her property by the husband of Mrs. McCampbell, and by her testimony given on appellant’s examining trial, which was reproduced through the stenographic report of the evidence, officially taken and transcribed by the court stenographer on that trial; she having died between the time of the examining trial and the trial under the indictment in the circuit court. Although the articles of silverware had been somewhat defaced and the initials of the owner attempted to be removed therefrom, its identification as the property of Mrs. McCampbellseemed to- have been complete, and it appeared from the testimony of Aaron Meyers, the pawn broker, that he received in pawn the identified articles from Willis, December 18,1909, at which time he let Willis have $5.00 upon the articles, but that afterwards, about December 18, Willis came back to his pawn shop with appellant; that appellant then presented the pawn ticket which-Meyers had previously given to Willis, and offered to sell the ticket to Meyers, claiming that the articles for which he held the ticket belonged to him. Thereupon, Meyers bought the ticket from him for $1.00 in addition to the $5.00, previously advanced to Willis when the silverware was pawned, and appellant received the $1.00 and delivered the ticket to Meyers. Meyers ' further testified that when he received the silver it was in the battered condition it bore at the time of the trial, and that he kept it in his store for six months, and exhibited it to the police authorities frequently to ascertain whether or not it was stolen; that -later his wife saw the silver and admired it, and that he, Meyers, sent it out to his home, where it was used by his wife: . While the [478]*478silver was at Meyers’ home,-the husband of Mrs. McCampbell went there, saw and identified it.

It is very apparent from the evidence that all the silver stolen from Mrs. McCampbell was not sold to Meyers, and that such of it as he purchased did not exceed $50.00 in value; whereas the value of all that was stolen was as much as $250.00. The remainder of the silver was, however, found by the husband of Mrs. McCampbell at Tenth and Jefferson streets, where appellant told Policeman Scanlon it would be found. The witnesses, Oahleaf and Hudson, the latter a saloon-keeper, and two policemen, saw appellant with silverware, which he tried to sell Hudson.

Appellant, on the other hand, in giving his testimony, denied stealing the silver, and also' denied that he sold the pawn ticket to- Meyers; and while admitting that Oakleaf and the two policemen saw him with silverware, which he tried to sell to Hudson, it was, as he claimed, the property of his wife which he took while intoxicated and without her knowledge for the purpose of selling it. Hudson, upon seeing the silverware stolen from Mrs. McCampbell, failed to identify it as the same appellant offered to sell him, and other witnesses testifying for appellant stated that his father-in-law took from him the silverware, which appellant tried to sell Hudson, and returned it to his wife.

We think it fairly manifest from the evidence that the silverware which appellant tried to sell Hudson was not Mrs. McCampbell’s, but belonged to his (appellant’s) wife; it is, however, very manifest from the evidence that this silverware was taken from him by his father-in-law and returned to his wife some time before he sold the pawn ticket to Meyers and claimed ownership of the silver of Mrs. McCampbell, which Willis had theretofore pawned to Meyers. It appears from the evidence, therefore, that the silver belonging to his wife was in her possession at the time of the sale of the pawn ticket by appellant to Meyers, and when he asserted ownership of the silver of Mrs. McCampbell.

So, notwithstanding the evidence by which appellant attempted to show that the only silver he had in his possession was that of his wife, there were at least three material facts brought out by the evidence of the Commonwealth, which conduced to prove his guilt under the indictment, viz.:

[479]*479First: That he claimed to own and sold the ticket to Meyers, which evidenced the latter’s possession of Mrs. McCampbell’s silver; second: that he also claimed to be the owner of the silver; third: that the remainder of Mrs. McCampbell’s silver was recovered where he informed Policeman Scanlon it could be found. Proof of these facts authorized the submission of the case upon all the evidence to the jury, and we are unable to say the verdict is not supported by evidence, or even that it is flagrantly against the evidence.

Appellant also complains of the admission of incompetent evidence, consisting of the testimony of Oakleaf, Hudson, the policeman and others, with respect to his possession of the silverware belonging to his wife and his attempts to sell it. We find no reason for holding this evidence incompetent, and the fact that it was his wife’s silver was, in the main, brought out by the cross-examination made of the witnesses by appellant’s counsel; besides, we do not find that any of this evidence was objected to by him, or that any exception was taken to the rulings of the court in admitting it.

He also insists that the trial court erred in allowing proof of the statements made by Mrs. McCampbell on appellant’s preliminary or examining trial. It was in proof and not disputed, that she was dead at the time of the trial in the circuit court, and that she 'had testified on the examining trial; and the fact that her testimony was correctly taken down and transcribed by the official stenographer of the court at the time it was given was shown by the testimony of the latter when it was read to the jury. There was, therefore, no error in the admission of this testimony. We have repeatedly held that the transcript of the evidence of a deceased witness, testifying at a former trial, may be proved by the official stenographer and read by him as evidence, when he testifies that the testimony was taken down by him correctly and accurately transcribed. Austin v. The Commonwealth, 124 Ky., 55; Moore v. Commonwealth, 143 Ky., 405.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 892, 149 Ky. 476, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinlan-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1912.