State v. Skillings

97 A.2d 202, 98 N.H. 203, 1953 N.H. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 2, 1953
Docket4175
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 97 A.2d 202 (State v. Skillings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Skillings, 97 A.2d 202, 98 N.H. 203, 1953 N.H. LEXIS 49 (N.H. 1953).

Opinion

Duncan, J.

The offense which the respondent is charged with having committed on December 13,1949, is that of larceny from the home of Sarah A. Rollins of $12,000 belonging to her. R. L., c. 452, s. 3, as amended by Laws 1949, c. 140, s. 1.

Mrs. Rollins was an aged woman, ninety-one at the time of her death in April, 1950, who suffered a cerebral hemorrhage on November 20, 1949. Thereafter for the most part, she was confined to her bed until her death. According to the evidence it had been reputed for some time that she kept large sums of money about her home, and in 1948 she was advised to “count her money” and stated that she had $158,000. There was evidence that she customarily concealed currency in a variety of places in the house: under a rug, under a pillow and the mattress of her bed, in a clock, in a closet and in a kitchen table drawer. At her death only a few hundred dollars cash on hand were found, and slightly less than $20,000 in savings bank deposits.

The respondent conducted a garage business on premises rented from Mrs. Rollins who also had income from other rentals. The gar *205 age business had originally been operated by the respondent’s brother, to whom Mrs. Rollins had loaned substantial sums of money. The brother became involved in financial difficulties, and at the time of trial was indebted to Mrs. Rollins for loans of over $40,000. In August, 1949, the respondent took over the business, which was incorporated in October, 1949. He had no franchise as an automobile dealer, and found it difficult to meet operating expenses from such income as was derived from gasoline sales and automobile repair. He succeeded in obtaining the agency for Mercury and Lincoln cars, upon a limited basis in December, 1949. By August, 1950, however he was unable to meet requirements imposed by the bank in order to retain the agency, and the business was closed by action of his creditors at that time.

In July, 1949, Mrs. Rollins cashed some government bonds, receiving a total of $28,525, consisting in part of twenty-eight $1,000 bills. On August 12, she loaned the respondent $4,000 and on October 22, 1949, when the garage business was incorporated, an additional $4,000. Both loans were made in cash. The second loan was deposited by the respondent in a Somersworth bank. He testified that the currency representing the first loan was kept by him in a bureau drawer at his homo. At one time he testified that this loan consisted of four $1,000 bills, and at other times that it was partly small bills, but included at least one $1,000 bill. It could be found that Mrs. Rollins refused him an additional loan after October 22 and he testified that in November, 1949, he borrowed $1,250 from another individual in Somersworth. This loan was repaid by a check for $1,300 on January 28, 1950.

There was evidence that during October, November, and early December, the financial condition of the respondent’s business was “very, very poor.” At times it was necessary for him to borrow from his bookkeeper in order to meet the payroll. On or about December 13, arrangements were completed to obtain the Lincoln-Mercury franchise, and there was evidence that on that occasion the respondent exhibited to the treasurer of his organization an envelope containing a large number of bills which he stated amounted to $15,000. The currency was tied in individual bundles with string and thread, and had an old and musty odor. The respondent however testified that he had between eight and nine thousand dollars to show to the company representative on that occasion.

On December 15, 1949, the respondent purchased a Mercury automobile at Haverhill, Massachusetts for $1,913.19, and on Decern *206 ber 22, a Lincoln for $2,800. Both purchases were made with small bills which were described as “old,” “musty,” “sticky” and “dirty,” and having the appearance of having been “in storage some place.” There was also evidence that the respondent appeared to be well supplied with funds after the second week in December. Christmas bonuses were given to employees and the respondent purchased two elaborate electric trains for his “youngster.”

On January 3, 1950, Ada Chaney, a niece of Mrs. Rollins who had come to live with her shortly before Mrs. Rollins suffered the shock, delivered $3,250 of Mrs. Rollins’ money to the respondent to be used for the purchase of an automobile. She testified that there were three $1,000 bills in the payment. On the following day, the respondent bought from a Somersworth bank a certified check payable to the Ford Motor Company for $6,933.82, delivering currency consisting of bills of twenty dollars or less in denomination, which the teller testified “smelled very musty as though they had been laying in some place for some time.” The respondent testified that this was the currency received from Ada Chaney together with other currency which he had on hand. The money which Mrs. Rollins kept about the house was described as tied in small parcels and having a musty odor.

This evidence, coupled with evidence of statements made by the respondent following Mrs. Rollins’ shock, that he would now be in a position to search her house for money, and later that he would never have to do a day’s work and was independently rich was sufficient to warrant a finding that he had taken a very substantial sum from Mrs. Rollins’ home. From the loans made by Mrs. Rollins aggregating $8,000 the respondent claimed to have retained only $4,000 of the original currency, of which $1,000 could be found to be a single bill. He testified that this currency was drawn upon for the business and replaced from time to time. However by December 22 purchases aggregating $4,700 were made with currency which could be found to have come from Mrs. Rollins, and in early January the certified check was purchased with nearly $7,000 in similar currency. If the testimony of Ada Chaney were believed, no more than $250 of the currency which she furnished could have been used in the latter transactions, and the respondent’s testimony that he retained a substantial portion of the original loan did not require belief in view of the evidence of his financial difficulties up to mid-December.

Thus it could be found that in mid-December he possessed $15,000 in bills of small denominations having a musty odor, and that there *207 after he negotiated nearly $12,000 identified as having the same characteristics. The jury could find that some or all of this currency came from Mrs. Rollins and that it was acquired in no legitimate way. See State v. Gobin, 96 N. H. 220, 222. The evidence supporting the indictment was clearly sufficient to present an issue for the jury.

The remaining indictments arise out of evidence concerning the respondent’s conduct on December 31, 1949, and the period immediately prior thereto. It would serve no useful purpose to relate the evidence in detail. It was sufficient to warrant a finding that he evolved a scheme which he undertook to consummate on December 31, 1949, by which drugs which he mixed in an ice cream sundae were to be delivered to Ada Chaney at Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.2d 202, 98 N.H. 203, 1953 N.H. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-skillings-nh-1953.