Williams v. Commonwealth

71 S.E.2d 73, 193 Va. 764, 1952 Va. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 16, 1952
DocketRecord 3961
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 71 S.E.2d 73 (Williams v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Commonwealth, 71 S.E.2d 73, 193 Va. 764, 1952 Va. LEXIS 189 (Va. 1952).

Opinion

Whittle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The accused was convicted under an indictment charging him with having broken and entered, “in the night time”, the Snack Bar in the city of Norfolk, with intent to commit larceny therein, and with the larceny of one pistol and $121.65 in cash, the property of the proprietor, Doyle R. Lynch.

*766 Trial by jury was waived and the cáse was heard by the judge who found the accused guilty of “storebreaking with intent to commit larceny” and sentenced him to serve two years in the penitentiary. We granted a writ of error to the judgment.

The Commonwealth’s evidence indicated that the alleged crime occurred between the hours of 5:00 p.m. on June 27, 1951, when the establishment was closed for the day, and 6:00 a. m. June 28, when it was opened for business.

There was no evidence to show how entry was made. It was assumed by the owner that entry had been through the front door as the lock was defective and could be opened without a key. It could be opened with a “fingernail file” .or any similar instrument. All of the employees knew that the door could be so opened.

Lynch did not undertake to say when the place had been entered, whether in the daytime or night time, he did not know. He testified, however, that he saw the accused, together with Dorothy Buchanan and William Ellis, in front of his place of business around 9:30 on the night of the alleged entry.

Lynch further stated that Dorothy Buchanan had’been employed as a waitress for about four days and that she and the other employees knew of his custom to take all large bills from the cash register and hide them ‘ ‘ down between- the two drink boxes, with a screen over it”. On the afternoon of the 27th of June he says that he left “about $10.00 in the cash register and about $115.00 in the bag between the boxes”. That the .32 Colt pistol belonging to his wife “stays in a drawer * * # right below the cash register”. That when he returned the next morning, June 28, the money and the pistol were missing.

With the change in the cash register were two bent dimes which he had placed in the “back slot” of the register “because I didn’t want to give them out for change and have somebody drop them in the juke box and foul that up”.

Lynch stated that he also had some coins in the register marked with fingernail polish “so that when the juke box failed to play, I would take one of these coins out and instead of giving it to the customer, put it in and play a song”. This was done to satisfy the customer, “and when the man (from whom the juke box was rented) opened the machine, he always gave it (the marked coin) back to me”.

Lynch admitted that it was the custom of juke box operators *767 to mark coins with fingernail polish for the reason assigned, and that at times the marked coins were used to make change. He also admitted that he conld not tell his marked nickels from others similarly marked.

Howard E. Barnes, a cook at the Snack Bar, stated that the money and pistol were missing when he arrived on the morning of June 28. He conld not tell how or when entrance had been made. He had explained to the waitress, Dorothy Buchanan, how she could unlock the door without a key. He further stated that Dorothy Buchanan had been employed only four days before the break-in, and that the accused and William Ellis were in the Snack Bar every day that she worked there. Dorothy had been released after the trial in police court, having been found not guilty, and she was not present at the trial of the accused.

Detective Longmire testified that he and Sergeant Murden of the Norfolk Detective Bureau had been assigned to the case, that they arrested the' accused about 9:45 on the morning of June 28. Upon searching him they found $19 in bills, $1.09 in change, and a Colonna shipyard button in his wallet. Included in the $1.09 in change were two bent dimes and two nickels with some red markings on them. The accused told them this was all the money he had but later they found $100 in a “wad” in the watch pocket of his trousers.

The detectives also testified, over the objection of the accused, as to how they came into possession of the pistol. This testimony is the subject of assignment of error No. 2 and will be treated later.

The accused took the stand in his own behalf. He stated that he had been employed at the shipyard as a mechanic’s helper at $1.08 per hour, plus overtime; he was laid off about June 15, 1951, and that the money found on his person by the officers had been earned by him; he was living with his mother and was not required to pay room and board; and that he had about $176 when he was laid off from work.

Accused admitted telling the officers that the money found in his wallet was all he had on him, but said that he had changed trousers and thought at the time that the $100 had been left in his other clothes. He explained that he had gotten the two bent dimes and the marked nickels in change at the College Inn the night of June 27 when he, Ellis, and Dorothy Buchanan were there drinking beer and playing shuffleboard; that he had at *768 tempted to insert one of the dimes in the machine, it had become clogged and he borrowed a knife from Mrs. Arzetta Phillips, cashier of the Inn, to recover the bent dime; that he secured change several times at College Inn on the night of June 27 for the purpose of playing shuffleboard, and that the bent dimes and marked nickels had evidently been obtained in this way. Accused was asked on cross-examination, for the purpose of impeachment, if he had not been previously convicted of a felony and he admitted that he had.

Mrs. Arzetta Phillips, cashier at College Inn, testified that the accused and William Ellis and the Buchanan girl were there on the night of June 27, that she made change for accused in order for him to play shuffleboard; that a bent dime had clogged the machine and accused had asked her for a knife to dislodge it; that she gave the accused change on two occasions and that it was possible for coins marked with fingernail polish to have been included in the change.

Bonita Adams, a waitress at the College Diner, located across the street from College Inn, testified that she had found nickels, dimes and quarters marked with fingernail polish in her change box.

Doyle R. Lynch was recalled by the Commonwealth and described how the nickels were marked. He said, “No, I didn’t dip them, I laid them down and made a streak across them. ’ ’ He was asked if “other stores also use that system”, and he answered, “some of them do, I think.” On cross-examination he admitted that Mr. Parrott, owner of College Inn, had been in his place spending marked coins.

Two assignments of error are relied upon:

No. 1. “The trial court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law, and without evidence to support it.”

No. 2. “The trial court erred in overruling the defendant’s • motion to' strike from the evidence the pistol introduced into the evidence by the Commonwealth on the grounds there was no evidence to connect the defendant with the pistol stolen from the complaining witness.”

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.E.2d 73, 193 Va. 764, 1952 Va. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-commonwealth-va-1952.