State v. Marcovitz

248 N.W. 481, 63 N.D. 458, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 199
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1933
DocketFile No. 99 Cr.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 248 N.W. 481 (State v. Marcovitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Marcovitz, 248 N.W. 481, 63 N.D. 458, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 199 (N.D. 1933).

Opinion

Burr, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of receiving stolen property and ivas duly sentenced, after his motion in arrest of judgment had been denied.

The defendant moved for a new' trial upon the following grounds:

“That the court misdirected the jury in matters of law and erred in the decision of questions of law arising during the course of the trial, as is more fully set forth under the specifications of error hereto attached.
“That the verdict as rendered by the jury is contrary to law and is clearly against the evidence as is more fully set forth in the specifications of error hereto attached.
*461 “That said motion will be based upon tbe minutes of the Court, thfe testimony introduced at tbe trial and all records and files in this action; tbe statement of tbe case settled and allowed by tbe Court, tbe instructions of tbe jury and tbe annexed specifications of error.”

Tbis motion was denied and defendant appeals to tbis court from the order denying tbe motion for a new trial.

There are twenty-six specifications of error, which, appellant says, present six issues. We deal with these in tbe order presented.

Appellant says “the information does not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense, and is fatally defective in other respects.” Tbe demurrer interposed says also “that more than one offense is charged therein.”

Section 9926 of tbe Code says: “Every person who buys or receives, in any manner, upon any consideration, any personal property of any value whatsoever, that has been stolen from any other, knowing tbe same to have been stolen, and with tbe intent to deprive tbe owner thereof,” is guilty of receiving stolen property. Much argument is devoted to the form of tbe information, tbe arrangement of tbe clauses and tbe punctuation. Tbe information charges that the “defendant did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously buy and receive, upon a consideration, personal property, namely: dressed turkeys aggregating approximately forty-three hundred pounds in weight, of value exceeding tbe sum of four hundred dollars, which said property bad been feloniously stolen from another in said Burleigh county, North Dakota, prior thereto, knowing the same to have been stolen, and with intent to deprive the owner thereof, etc.”

Tbe comment of this court in State v. Ross, 46 N. D. 167, 169, 179 N. W. 993, is applicable here. “Although the phrases might have been differently arranged, and placed perhaps in closer apposition to the words which some of them modify, nevertheless, it is clear, upon reading the entire information,” that the defendant is charged with receiving property that had been stolen from another, knowing it to be, stolen when he received it and receiving it with intent to deprive the owner thereof. Our statutes require the information to contain “a statement of the acts constituting the offense, -in ordinary; and concise language, and in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended; ” and provides that the information. *462 is sufficient if so charged. Comp. Laws, §§ 10,685 and 10,693. The information in this case is sufficiently similar to the information in the case of State v. Rose, supra, to be governed by the rules set forth therein. The demurrer was properly over-ruled.

The court charged the jury that four of the witnesses were accomplices and appellant says that the testimony of these accomplices is not corroborated sufficiently so as to sustain the verdict.

The main testimony for the State is given by four witnesses whom the trial court, in its charge to the jury, denominated accomplices.

Section 10,841 of the Compiled Laws says: “A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice ■ unless he is corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense, and the corroboration is not sufficient if it merely shows the commission of the offense, or the circumstances thereof.” i The testimony is too lengthy to set forth a summary. The defendant made no serious attempt to- show that he had not received stolen property. His defense was directed to the point that at the time he got it he did not know it was stolen. The State was required to prove his guilty knowledge. Three of the State witnesses- — Brown, Caya, and Douglas — were confessedly guilty of larceny in the taking of the turkeys from the car. The defendant is not charged with this larceny, or with being connected with the larceny. The State’s witness Ditch, without question, was an accomplice, and if the others were accomplices also, one accomplice can not corroborate another.

But the corroboration of accomplices need not include the corroboration of every material fact testified to by the accomplices. These accomplices are witnesses themselves and their credibility is for the jury. Thus it is not necessary that the corroborative testimony be in. itself strong enough to support a conviction. The corroboration must be such as to have a tendency to connect the defendant with receiving stolen property knowing it to be stolen when he received it. If there is such corroborative testimony then the jury may from that infer that the accomplices spoke the truth as to other matters — they being the judge of the credibility of the witnesses. See State v. Dodson, 23 N. D. 305; 136 N. W. 789; State v. Reilly, 22 N. D. 353, 133 N. W. 914. The purpose of corroborative testimony is to show that the accomplices are reliable witnesses and worthy of credit; but must be on that phase of *463 their testimony which tends to connect the defendant with the c'onimission of the crime. See State v. Seitz, 194 Iowa, 1057, 187 N. W. 695; Moody v. State, 13 Okla. Crim. Rep. 327, 164 Pac. 676.

The admissions made by defendant are exceedingly damaging, and his own corroboration of what these accomplices said took place from the time the turkeys were brought to the warehouse until the final payment was made is corroboration on material points and these facts -the jury had to consider in determining guilty knowledge.

In State v. Frederickson, 59 N. D. 498, 230 N. W. 733, we had occasion to refer to the circumstances of a case known to the defendant at the time he received the stolen property tending to show guilty knowledge, including any unreasonable statement which the defendant- himself might make regarding the property, and held that it was for the jury to pass upon these matters and determine whether the State has proved guilty knowledge. There was sufficient corroboration in what the defendant himself admitted, in what the employee Helle .said, in the corroboration by Bill Caya of the accomplices’ statement of defendant’s quests for Caya to take the matter to the jury. See also State v. McCarty, 47 N. D. 523, 182 N. W. 754. The jury was instructed fully in regard to the necessity for corroboration and the scope. It was for the jury to say whether, in the light of this corroborated testimony they believe these accomplices in regard to the other matters of which they testified.

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Bluebook (online)
248 N.W. 481, 63 N.D. 458, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marcovitz-nd-1933.