State v. Addison

87 N.W.2d 916, 249 Iowa 905, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 543
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 1958
Docket49293
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 N.W.2d 916 (State v. Addison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Addison, 87 N.W.2d 916, 249 Iowa 905, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 543 (iowa 1958).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

In April 1957 the Polk County grand jury indicted Lawrence P. Addison for receiving stolen property, as defined in section 712.1, Code of Iowa, 1954, charging he bought, received or aided in concealing a stolen movie projector belonging to the Independent School District of Des Moines, and worth more than twenty dollars, knowing it had been stolen. Thereafter, in compliance with a motion made by defendant, the State filed a Bill of Particulars, which stated defendant purchased the movie projector shortly subsequent to October 9,1956, and purchased a typewriter, referred to in the minutes attached to the indictment, shortly after the first week of February 1957.

The indictment followed the arrest of Jerry Devan, a *907 fifteen-year-old boy, who confessed he, with several other youths, had committed twenty-three thefts and burglaries in Des Moines about the year 1956, including a number of burglaries of the junior high school from which the movie projector was taken. Jerry was a witness before the grand jury for four days, concerning these matters.

The principal of the school testified it was broken into and the movie projector taken during the night of October 9, 1956. There was evidence the value of the (used) projector was $150. Jerry Devan testified he took it from the school to his home. The name of the school district was painted on it. Jerry scratched it off with a razor blade. He tried to sell it and contacted Mrs. Watson and Mary Davis by telephone. The following day he took the projector to the house occupied by his older brother Charles Devan, Jr., and Mary Davis. From there it was taken by Jerry, Charles and Mary, in Charles’ automobile, to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Watson in Des Moines. This was about October 10, 1956, early in the evening.

Jerry set up and operated the projector in the Watson home, using the wall as a screen. He testified the Watsons, Mary Davis and defendant, Lawrence (Larry) Addison, were the only persons he saw there. “Larry bought the machine from me for $50. * * * I had a talk with Larry about the machine. He asked me was it hot. I told him yes.” Jerry gave his brother Charles $20 of the money paid him by defendant. Charles testified he heard some of the conversation and that defendant said he did not have to worry about the projector because everything he had he was taking with him out of the state.

Defendant is a chiropractor at Denver, Colorado. He had formerly been a resident of Des Moines for two years, and, according to one witness, had lived in the Watson home. Defendant and five others testified five of them had driven from Denver to Des Moines December 27, 1956, in connection with a mining venture in which they and the Watsons were interested, and that Jerry was at the Watson home with the movie projector when they came there that evening. They testified also that Jerry said his mother was in the hospital and his father had sent him out to raise money on the projector and a typewriter, both of which had been given him by his father; that Jerry *908 said he needed $50 on the projector and $25 on the typewriter and that defendant gave him $75 and told him he could have the machine back if he could raise the money before defendant left town. This story was contrary to Jerry’s testimony and was denied by him.

Defendant testified he returned to Denver the next day and took the movie projector and typewriter with him. He testified he did not know nor suspect they had been stolen; he did not think the projector was worth $50; he had no use for the items and gave Jerry $75 for them because he felt sorry for him. He testified also he left the projector in Denver and did not bring it to the trial because, even after his arraignment, he did not know it was the stolen property he was charged with having received.

In the State’s rebuttal evidence, Jerry Devan testified he and two other youths broke into the school building again early in February 1957 and took a typewriter; also they broke into a residence and took a 21-inch television set which they hauled away in a buggy like a baby carriage. They telephoned Jerry’s brother Charles, and Charles, Mr. Watson and defendant, Larry Addison, came in Mr. Watson’s automobile, to a place in an alley where the three youths had placed these articles, loaded the articles into the automobile and drove to 1520 Maple Street, the home of Charles Devan and Mary Davis, where defendant examined and tested the typewriter and television set, was told Charles wanted $20 for the typewriter and $30 for the television set, and gave the money to Charles, who gave Jerry $30. Jerry testified: “I have never sold Larry [defendant] any other typewriter. Larry said he was going to give the television set to Mrs. Watson. * * * I saw the television set in the Watson home when the policeman took me over to pick it up.”

The jury found defendant guilty as charged and found the value of the stolen property (movie projector) when bought by defendant was $100.

From judgment on the verdict defendant has appealed.

I. Defendant contends the evidence he knew the movie projector had been stolen when he purchased it was insufficient to permit the submission of that question to the jury. *909 This contention is not meritorious. There was substantial evidence reasonably tending to support the charge defendant knew the projector was stolen property. This, plus the proof of other essential elements, was sufficient to require the submission of the case to the jury. State v. Miskell, 247 Iowa 678, 686, 687, 73 N.W.2d 36, 41, and citations; State v. Rutledge, 243 Iowa 179, 183, 184, 47 N.W.2d 251. That much of this evidence came from the lips of one who stole the property did not invalidate it. State v. Feinberg, 145 Iowa 329, 124 N.W. 208; State v. Wehde, 226 Iowa 47, 283 N.W. 104. The credibility of the witnesses was for the jury.

II. Reference has been made to the testimony of Jerry Devan, in rebuttal, relative to the purchase by defendant in February 1957 of a typewriter and a television set taken by Jerry and two other youths from a schoolhouse and a dwelling house into which they had broken. No objection was made to the admission of that evidence. However, defendant assigns as error the admission in evidence over his objections of the testimony of four other witnesses to the same transactions, and the overruling of his motion to strike that part of the evidence of each of the five witnesses.

The questioned rulings were not erroneous. In the first place the testimony tended to rebut the testimony of defendant and his witnesses concerning his purchase of the movie projector. Witnesses for the State had testified defendant bought the projector, only, in October 1956. Their testimony made no reference to the typewriter. The version of defendant and his witnesses was that he bought both the projector and the typewriter in one transaction, December 27, 1956. It was proper for the State in rébuttal to present evidence tending to disprove defendant’s version that the transaction for which he was then being tried was linked together with his purchase of the typewriter.

That such evidence may have tended to show defendant was guilty of another crime did not make it inadmissible. State v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W.2d 916, 249 Iowa 905, 1958 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-addison-iowa-1958.