State v. White

152 P.2d 80, 107 Utah 84, 1944 Utah LEXIS 115
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1944
DocketNo. 6752.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 P.2d 80 (State v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. White, 152 P.2d 80, 107 Utah 84, 1944 Utah LEXIS 115 (Utah 1944).

Opinions

TURNER, Justice.

Appeal from a conviction of receiving stolen property. The defendant was charged in two counts with having received stolen property and grand larceny. At the conclusion of the State’s case, the count charging grand larceny was dismissed on motion of the defendant for lack of evidence. The defendant took the stand in his own defense and the trial resulted in a verdict of guilty on the remaining count and the jury fixed the value of the property at $51, constituting the offense a felony.

Sometime during the early morning of June 1, 1943, the Tooele Drug Store at Tooele, Utah, then owned by a partnership of J. H. Watson and E. J. Elkington, was burlarized. A glass showcase was broken into and certain jewelry, consisting of rings and watches, was stolen. Marshall B. Maleska pleaded guilty to this offense and was produced as a witness for the State in the trial of the defendant and appellant White. He testified that he alone burglarized the store, but that he talked to defendant White about two weeks before committing the offense and White told him that he could dispose of some of the jewelry if Maleska would get it; that shortly after noon of June 1st, after the burglary, he exhibited the stolen property to White and the latter took a set of two small lady’s diamond rings and a wrist watch, and that he, Maleska, in company with the defendant and another known only as Jack, went to Ogden where they tried unsuccessfully to sell the jewelry; that they then came to *86 Salt Lake City where they made further unsuccessful effort to sell it, and that he, Maleska, did not return to Tooele until after his arrest.

In his brief, appellant makes ten assignments of error. They may be summarized as follows: (1) Appellant contends that the two rings introduced in evidence were not sufficiently identified as property stolen from the Tooele Drug Store; (2) that the trial court erred in admitting testimony of J. H. Watson, one of the owners of the drug store, and Samuel A. Movitz, a wholesale jewelry salesman who sold the jewelry to the drug store, as to the value of the rings in evidence and that the court erred in refusing to grant defendant’s motion to reduce the charge of receiving stolen property from a felony to a misdemeanor; (3) that the trial court erred in permitting the witness Johnny Kochever to testify with reference to a post card received through the mail at the Streamliner Club in Tooele where defendant White and Kochever were employed; (4) that the court erred in failing to instruct the jury to disregard any testimony introduced under the charge of grand larceny, and in permitting the district attorney to argue evidence in support of this charge after it was dismissed; and (5) that the court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial and in refusing to vacate and set aside the sentence imposed pursuant to the conviction and withdraw its order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial and to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence submitted after sentence and judgment in an affidavit of Maleska to the effect that his testimony against defendant White at the trial was false and was made under threats and promises of the sheriff’s office at Tooele County.

(1) The rule relating to the identification of stolen property is stated in 17 R. C. L., Sec. 70, p. 65, as follows:

“The prosecution must identify stolen property found in the possession of the accused with that for the theft of which he is indicted, and this must be done by the most direct and positive testimony of which the case is susceptible.”

*87 The case of State v. Handler, 142 Kan. 455, 50 P. 2d 977, 979, involved the identification of certain automobile wheel rims. They were particularly identified because of spots of red paint on them, and one witness said that he might not be able to distinguish them from other rims of exactly the same kind, size and make. The court, in commenting on the evidence, said:

“Some of the cases cited by appellant were where the only evidence on the subject of identity was circumstantial. In the case at bar, the evidence was not circumstantial. The rule that such identifying testimony is required to be the most positive and direct of which the case is susceptible (17 K. C. L. 65) surely does not extend to the limit of an impossibility where two things look exactly alike. We think there was sufficient identification of the rims under the authorities above cited.”

In the instant case, the witness Maleska, the confessed burglar, testified that he had a conversation with the defendant in the Streamliner Club about two weeks before he entered the store; that the conversation was had in the presence of Johnny Kochever, the defendant White and the owner of the Club. He stated: “Well, we got to talking about jewelry and wrist watches, and Tex [the defendant] was telling me about some of the jewelry over at the drug store, and he said if I got it he would know where to get rid of it in Ogden, so we went over after that — I don’t remember how long after that — we went over to the drug store and looked at it * * *. There was a set of rings and wrist watches, and he said he would take that if I got them.” That when he entered the drug store he took some rings that looked like the two rings introduced in evidence; that he showed the defendant what he had taken out and the defendant “took what he wanted * * *. A set of rings and a wrist watch”; that the rings were similar to those introduced in evidence.

The witness Watson, one of the owners of the drug store, testified in identifying the rings in evidence that “They are very similar to rings that we had in stock at the store *88 at the time of the robbery” and “similar to the rings that were missing.” The witness Samuel A. Movitz testified that he was in the wholesale jewelry business; that he recognized the rings in evidence and that he had sold rings similar to them to the Tooele Drug during the fore part of 1943. In further identifying them, he said, “Well, we have a series of mountings that we make up. We sell quite a few of them, and the consequence is we know our rings when we see them” and that he recognized these as rings he had had mounted and sold.

The defendant White denied ever having received any jewelry from the witness Maleska, but testified with respect to the rings in evidence as follows: “I was tending bar in the Streamliner Club, and a guy came in there. I knew him just when I seen him. I sold him a lot of beer for six months at least, and he knew me very well, but I didn’t know his name. So he told me, he says, ‘ “Tex,” I am in a tough spot.’ He says, ‘Me and my wife is separated, and she give me these rings back.’ He said, T have got to make a payment on my trailer house and I would like to sell these rings for $25.’ I says, ‘Well, I would like to help you, but I don’t know what I would do with the rings.’. So finally I gave him $25 for the rings.” He testified that the rings in evidence were the ones he bought and that he gave them to his girl friend, and that he gave the sheriff her name and address in Salt Lake where the rings were recovered.

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Related

State v. Washington
476 P.2d 1019 (Utah Supreme Court, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
152 P.2d 80, 107 Utah 84, 1944 Utah LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-utah-1944.