State v. Nicoletti.

125 S.W.2d 33, 344 Mo. 86, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 33 (State v. Nicoletti.) 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. Nicoletti., 125 S.W.2d 33, 344 Mo. 86, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 600 (Mo. 1939).

Opinions

By indictment returned in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Frank Fiorino and the appellant herein, whom we shall call defendant, were charged jointly with the crime of grand larceny, alleged to have been committed in said county on August 17, 1934. It seems Fiorino absconded. Defendant Nicoletti was granted a severance, and after several continuances he was tried alone, was convicted and sentenced to two years' imprisonment in the penitentiary and has appealed. The principal question presented by the appeal is as to the sufficiency of the evidence. The evidence on behalf of the State tended to show the following:

On August 17, 1934, some person or persons entered the residence of Lewis S. Haslam, in Webster Groves, St. Louis County, and stole therefrom a pair of pearl or pearl inlaid opera glasses, an open faced yellow gold Elgin watch with a watch fob attached and, attached to the fob, a Phi Beta Kappa Key, also a "diamond engagement ring, white gold" and a "diamond cluster ring, white gold." Neither Mr. Haslam nor his wife was at home at the time. Mr. Haslam died in September, 1935, before this case was tried. Mrs. Haslam testified at the trial. She said that at the time of the larceny she was employed at St. Luke's Hospital; that on the morning of said August 17th when she left home to go to the hospital her husband was not at home; that she left the two diamond rings on her dresser; that when she returned home she found the room and dresser and bureau drawers in disarray, as though someone had rummaged through them, with much *Page 89 of the contents of the drawers dumped on the floor; and that the above described articles were missing. Soon thereafter she and her husband found the watch, fob and key at the pawnshop of one Miller and the opera glasses at another such place kept by one Schmidt. They identified and recovered those articles. It does not appear that the rings were recovered or found. At the trial the articles so recovered were clearly identified. It was shown that on said August 17th defendant pawned the watch, fob and key to Miller, and on August 18th pawned or sold the opera glasses to Schmidt, in each instance giving his name as Louis Longo and, to Miller, giving his address as 3100 Easton Avenue, St. Louis. Both name and address so given were false.

Mrs. Haslam testified that the watch was worth $20, the Phi Beta Kappa Key $7 and the opera glasses $10. She said the watch fob was of nice leather and "worth something" but did not name a value. Mr. Schmidt, asked the reasonable market value of opera glasses such as those in question, said, "They run new about twenty-five dollars." Mrs. Haslam testified that the watch, fob and key belonged to her husband, and the opera glasses to him and her both; that the diamond engagement ring was hers, having been given to her by her husband. She did not say which of them owned the other diamond ring. She gave the value of the engagement ring as $150 and of the other ring $300.

Defendant was arrested August 27, 1934, at Schmidt's place, where he was trying to dispose of another watch and some jewelry, description not disclosed and not here material. At police headquarters at Webster Groves he made and signed a written statement, as follows:

"August 30th, 1934.

"I, Tony Nicoletti, 24 years old, a native of Italy, single and residing with my Mother at 2805 Belt Avenue, St. Louis, Mo., do make the following statement of my own free will, without threats or promise of immunity on the part of the Webster Groves Police Department or on the part of Andrew McDonnell, Chief of Police: That:

"On Friday, August 17th, about 11:00 o'clock A.M. I left my mother's store at 2945 Cass Avenue, St. Louis, accompanied by Frank Fiorino, Alias Tirorno, Frank having ask me to drive him in my car to Woodson Road in St. Louis County. We drove around and at a place which I later learned was in Webster Groves, Frank told me to stop and wait for him, when he came back he told me to drive back to my mother's store, when we got back to the store he gave me a watch and a pair of Opera glasses and told me to pawn them. I pawned the Opera glasses at a pawnshop at 908 Franklin Avenue for $1.50 and the watch at a pawnshop at 113 No. Broadway for $1.25.

"On Friday, August 27th, Frank gave me another watch and some jewelry and told me to take them and pawn them, I took them to the *Page 90 pawnshop at 908 Franklin Avenue where I was arrested by St. Louis Police Officers with the above watch and jewelry on my person.

"(Signed) Tony Nicoletti."

Defendant, testifying for himself, admitted having made the above statement voluntarily and said it was true. He testified that he lived at 2805 Belt Avenue (City of St. Louis); that on August 17th, 1934, in the forenoon, Frank Fiorino came to his (defendant's) mother's store and asked defendant to drive him "out in St. Louis County," as he had "some business to take care of;" that he did take Fiorino in his (defendant's) car to a place in Webster Groves, Fiorino directing the way; that he did not know the street but stopped where Fiorino told him to and remained in the car (but not as a lookout) while Fiorino went in, saying he "would be right back;" that he could not tell how long Fiorino was gone, and when he returned to the car they drove back to his mother's store; that Fiorino gave him the opera glasses and the watch, fob and key and told him to pawn them, which he did and gave Fiorino the money; that he did not then know the articles had been stolen — did not learn that until he was "locked up." He admitted giving the name Longo at the pawnshops. At one — Miller's, the one where he had pawned the watch, fob and key on August 17th — he had signed a card or record kept by Miller, signing the name Longo. Asked why he had used that name he said, "Well, I didn't even know his last name. I couldn't even think of it at that time." (He had given his name as Louis Longo. Fiorino's Christian name is Frank). These questions and answeres followed:

"Q. Did you know Longo? A. I knew Longo. They locked me up, and I remembered at that time I made a mistake, that his name was Fiorino.

"Q. Did you go back there the second time? A. Yes, and the second time I went down there I knew it was Frank Fiorino.

"Q. How did you know him? A. I knowed him from coming in the store."

[By "second time" he may have meant the second visit to Schmidt's, which was on August 27th.]

On cross-examination he said that he used the name Longo because he thought at that time "the other boy's" name was Longo — that "the time he came over the second time I heard his name." He was asked why he did not take the opera glasses to Miller's where he pawned the watch, and replied, "The glasses was the first time . . . I didn't get the watch at that time." [But the State's evidence shows that the watch, fob and key were pawned to Miller on August 17th and the opera glasses to Schmidt on the 18th.] Defendant gave no explanation of why he had given his address to Miller as 3100 Easton. The police could find no one at that address by the name or answering the description of "Longo." Defendant offered no evidence other than his own testimony. *Page 91

Appellant argues that the evidence does not show when the watch and fob, with key attached, were taken; that Mrs. Haslam said they were gone, but did not say when they were last in the possession of Mr. Haslam; that from the description of the watch, an "old fashioned" one, it might be presumed it was not carried by Mr. Haslam and that it may have been kept "more or less as a keepsake, tucked away in some obscure drawer," and seldom looked at, and might have been gone for a long time. The argument is ingenious but not persuasive. When Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 33, 344 Mo. 86, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nicoletti-mo-1939.