State v. Burrage

418 S.W.2d 101, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 858
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 10, 1967
Docket52287
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 418 S.W.2d 101 (State v. Burrage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Burrage, 418 S.W.2d 101, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 858 (Mo. 1967).

Opinion

FINCH, Presiding Judge.

Defendant was tried on an information which charged him with burglary in the second degree and stealing and with one prior felony conviction. The jury acquitted defendant of burglary but convicted him of *103 the felony of stealing more than $50.00. The trial court found the defendant did have a prior felony conviction on which he had been incarcerated and fixed defendant’s punishment at imprisonment in the City Workhouse for one year with credit to be given for two months and twelve days time spent in jail. Defendant has appealed from that conviction and sentence.

Defendant was represented in the trial court by appointed counsel, who filed a brief on appeal and argued the case orally. The questions presented on appeal involve the sufficiency of the evidence and the propriety of certain instructions.

The State’s evidence, viewed most favorably, as we must do in passing on the sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict of guilty, State v. Taylor, Mo., 324 S.W.2d 643, 76 ALR 2d 671, supports the following recital of facts: On February 28, 1966, sometime between 8:15 a.m., and 3:30 p.m., a television set, a sewing machine, a hi-fi, some records, a fan, and a steam iron were taken from the apartment of Mrs. Barbara Davis at 1368a Clara in the City of St. Louis. The theft was discovered the latter part of the afternoon and Mrs. Davis notified the police.

On the evening of March 1, 1966, at approximately 10:30 p.m., two officers of the St. Louis Police Department noticed a car stopped in a “No Parking” zone at 1500 Clara. Standing next to the rear door on the left side of the car was the defendant, Albert Burrage. Two people were observed on the other side of the car but they moved away and disappeared as the police car approached. The officers got out of their car and approached the parked car. The left rear door of that car was open and the officers observed a television set on the rear seat of the car.

The officers placed a parking violation ticket on the car and asked who owned the television set, and Burrage said that it belonged to him and that he was going to pawn it because he had a daughter in Homer G. Phillips Hospital and needed the money. He further stated that he brought it from his girl friend’s house at 1368 Clara. He gave her name as Aline Baker. With reference to the car itself, defendant told the officers that it belonged to his brother-in-law, Joe Hughes, and said something to the effect that Hughes had gone over to East St. Louis, leaving the car there with him. The officers ascertained that the car was registered to Joe Hughes at an address in St. Louis. They sought to talk to him there but he was not at home and apparently there was no attempt to locate him later. The officers’ best recollection was that the keys to the car were in the ignition switch at the time they talked to the defendant.

The officers told defendant they would go to 1368 Clara to see whether Aline Baker would verify his statement that he had brought the television set from her house, and they took defendant along. Miss Baker did not verify the defendant’s story and said that she did not know anything about the television.

The officers then took defendant to the Seventh District Station at Union and Page for normal booking procedure. When defendant was searched, some pawn tickets were found in his pants pocket, one of which indicated on its face that it was for a sewing machine pawned at a pawn shop on Franklin Avenue. The officers contacted Mrs. Davis and she came to the police station and identified the television set as the one taken from her place. The next day, Officer Reed took Mrs. Davis to the pawn shop where she identified the sewing machine represented by the pawn ticket as being the one taken from her apartment.

The evidence disclosed that the defendant was living with Miss Baker at 1368 Clara, which was the downstairs apartment in the same building where Mrs. Davis occupied the second-story apartment.

We hold that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction of defendant for *104 stealing the articles in question. This was not simply a case of defendant being in the vicinity in suspicious circumstances. When the officers found defendant at 10:30 p.m., standing beside the open rear door of the car in which the stolen television set was located, he told them that the car belonged to his brother-in-law, who had gone to East St. Louis and had left the car there with him. The keys were in the car. Furthermore, defendant claimed ownership of the stolen television set, saying he had brought it from the apartment of his girl friend at 1368 Clara and that he was going to pawn it. Hence, he claimed ownership of and dominion over the stolen article found in his possession. In addition, the defendant had in his pocket a pawn ticket for the stolen sewing machine. It is true, as defendant points out, that the clerk at the pawn shop stated that he could not identify the defendant as the man who pawned the sewing machine, but the fact remains that the defendant, on the evening following the theft of the sewing machine, was in possession of the pawn ticket which covered the stolen sewing machine. Defendant asserts that the evidence did not clearly establish that the pawn ticket was in the pants pocket of the defendant and that the officers indicated that it might have been in the pocket of a fatigue jacket which defendant’s brief asserts the defendant picked up off of the seat of the car when he accompanied the officers. We do not agree with this interpretation of the evidence. We find that Officer Reed said, “To the best of my knowledge, those tickets came out of his pocket, his trouser pocket; I do not remember which one of his pockets it was, out of his trouser pocket.” When asked if he was sure that the ticket did not come out of the fatigue jacket, the officer replied, “I don’t known anything about a fatigue jacket.” This evidence, viewed most favorably for the State, certainly established that the pawn ticket was in the defendant’s pants pocket.

The rule is well settled that possession of recently stolen property is sufficient to sustain a conviction of larceny. State v. Jones, Mo., 358 S.W.2d 782, 784[2]; State v. Durham, Mo., 367 S.W.2d 619, 621 [2]; State v. Reagan, Mo., 328 S.W.2d 26, 29[6], To authorize such inference of guilt, the defendant’s possession of the property should not be too remote in point of time from the larceny, and “it should be a personal possession, exclusive, distinct and conscious, and unexplained.” State v. Durham, supra, 1. c. 622. Where, as here, there is no question but what the property was stolen, or as to the identity of the property in the defendant’s possession, and the possession was on the day following the larceny, and the defendant asserted ownership, possession and control over the property, it was permissible for the jury to infer therefrom that defendant had participated in the stealing.

Defendant cites several cases as authority for the proposition that the court erred in overruling his motion for judgment of acquittal. These cases, however, are not analogous. In State v. Rogers, Mo.,

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Bluebook (online)
418 S.W.2d 101, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burrage-mo-1967.