State v. Concord

172 Iowa 467
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 172 Iowa 467 (State v. Concord) 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. Concord, 172 Iowa 467 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Deemer, C. J.

1. Burglary : verdict: sumdenee. I. The accused is charged with breaking and entering the dwelling of one Sol Neuderman. The indictment alleges that he was armed with a deadly weapon and that he did the breaking with intent to commit larceny. The testimony discloses that Neuderman was the owner and manager of a moving picture show located at East Sixth Street'and Grand Avenue in the city of Des Moines. The picture show occupied the lower floor of a two-story building, the second floor being used for offices and living apartments by other people. On Sunday, August 2, 1914, Neuderman, who was an unmarried man, moved into one of the apartments on the second floor of the building. On the night of that day, he closed his show at about 10:45 P. M., and placing the receipts of that day and of the previous Saturday night in a canvas money sack - (the banks being closed from Saturday afternoon until Monday morning), he went to his room oil the second floor of the building and, leaving the money in his room, went down to the corner of East Fifth and Locust Streets, two blocks away, to a lunch counter. There he ate a lunch, and when he had finished, returned to his room and retired for the night. Shortly after retiring, he heard some person, or persons, in the upstairs hallway, and after inquiring who it was, and receiving no response, he got up and closed a door to his room, which had been left open. Shortly thereafter, someone -broke open a screen door to the room and also broke the glass in the door to Neuderman’s room, in which he (Neuderman) was sleeping, and entered the room. We here quote from the record showing what then occurred:

“I run to my >back window and hollered in the street, ‘ Robbers, help ’; and he come to me and I was laying in bed close to .the window and he put his arm around my neck and wouldn’t let me'holler, and says, ‘Give me your money’. He had a gun which I seen, when he pulled it higher. He says, ‘Give me the money quick, or your life’. He had in his hand [471]*471a gun. It looks like this gun. They found it afterwards and I seen it again. I tried to get him by the neck as quick as I could reach him a little. I turned over, and the lady who was screaming ánd hollering and his partner that was there run away, and he commenced to run out to the back door down the hall towards the west. I did not follow' him. I next saw him-.when the policeman brought him around upstairs. ’ ’

The state claims that defendant is the person who did the breaking and entering, while' defendant denied that he was the guilty party, and also introduced testimony tending to show an alibi. Neuderman identified the defendant as the man who assaulted him, and a woman who had apartments on the same floor with Neuderman identified defendant as one of the men whom she saw about 10:30 o ’clock in the evening in the hallway, acting in a suspicious manner. The breaking was done somewhere between 11:15 and 11:30 P. M.; and a policeman, who was called to quell a fight at Bast Sixth Street and Grand Avenue, saw defendant on the back stairs of the building, or on the platform thereof, about 11:30 P. M., and then arrested him. He was taken around to the front and upstairs and there identified by Neuderman, and by the woman who saw him in the hall. After taking defendant to the police station, the officer returned to the building, went upstairs, and there, near a door-oasing in the rear of the hallway, he found a 45-caliber revolver, which was loaded. The revolver was found back of the suite of rooms occupied by Neuderman and some distance away from. his room. Another policeman, who had been called to quell a fight in the alley back of the building where the breaking occurred, was present when defendant was arrested, and he, with the first named officer, arrested the defendant as he was seen on the back stairs of the building. The revolver, which the policeman identified as the one found by him in the hallway, was offered and received in evidence over defendant’s objection.

[472]*472The only testimony, down to this point, showing that defendant ever had this revolver, is that it was found m the hallway at a place past which the defendant retreated, if he was the guilty man. Defendant offered testimony to show that, on the night in question, between 10:00 and 11:00 o’clock P. M., he was at Berlovich’s horse barn at 223 East Fifth Street, where he then worked, and that thereafter he' was with some parties who were engaged in a sort of running fight from the corner of East Fifth and Walnut Streets, north to the corner of Locust Street and again near East Sixth and Grand Avenue, and that the fighting did not close until .between 11:00 and 12:00 o’clock, — “right around between 11:20 and 11:30 P. M.”, as one of the witnesses expressed it.

The jury evidently did not believe the testimony relating to the alibi, and there was enough tending to show defendant’s guilt to justify the verdict returned. Many errors are relied upon for reversal, but they relate chiefly to rulings on testimony and to the instructions given and omitted.

„ „ law : demonstrative ovi«cation of6gun • sufficiency. II. It is claimed that the revolver should not have been admitted in testimony without more of a showing than is so far recited. The hallway in which it was found led down to the street in front and to the alley in the rear, and there were no doors either at the foot or ^ie toP either stairway. There was no testimony as to how long the revolver had been there, and nothing in the record quoted, save a mere inference, that, the defendant ever had the revolver in his possession. The state relies, however, upon some further testimony to which we shall now refer. Berlovieh, the proprietor of the horse barn where defendant worked just before the crime was committed, was a witness for defendant. In his examination in chief, he endeavored to account for the defendant down until nearly 11:00 o’clock P. M. He was also presented with the revolver and asked if he had ever seen it before, to. which he responded that he had not. He was then asked if he ever saw that gun in the possession of the defendant, and [473]*473on the state’s objection he was not permitted to answer. On cross-examination the following record was made :•

3. inconsistent*: statements. “I say I never saw this gun before. It was on Monday morning that I first heard of Mr. Concord’s arrest, and I went down to the police station. Officer Jackson was there. I said, ‘I see they arrested Tom Concord’, and had brought some big gun, and I. says, ‘ I have got an old gun down in the office, a long barreled gun and maybe it is my gun.’ And Jackson showed me his gun and' I said, ‘ This is not my gun. ’ ” .Q. “ Now, isn’t it a fact that in that conversation with Chief Jackson at that time and at that place you said to him this, in substance, when he showed you the gun. ‘This is my gun; the son of a gun’s stole my gun.’ ” A. “No, sir. I never had a gun like that in my life.” Q. “Is this statement true or false? Did you or did you not say that?” A. “I never did.”

Officer Jackson was called by the state on rebuttal and the following is a reproduction of the record then made:

“I recall the time of Tom Concord’s arrest. It was in the forepart of August. I recall having a conversation with Barney Berlovich at police headquarters shortly after that.” Q.

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Bluebook (online)
172 Iowa 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-concord-iowa-1915.