delivered the opinion of the Court.
Lawrence G. Carter, the appellant, was convicted of receiving stolen goods in the Criminal Court of Baltimore by Judge David Ross presiding without a jury. The sentence was one year imprisonment.
It was stipulated that the home of one Newton Stumpf was broken into on January 15, 1969, by a person or persons unknown and certain items stolen, among which was a .22 caliber automatic pistol, valued at $40.
David Bloom, a 15 year old at the time of the crime, admitted breaking into the Stumpf home on January 15, 1969, stealing among other items the .22 caliber automatic pistol. Later in the day, on Eastern Avenue, Bloom was introduced to Carter by a mutual friend, and discussed the sale of the pistol. The same evening Bloom met Carter in the rest room of a local restaurant and completed the sale at the price of $30. Bloom did not think he had told Carter the gun was stolen, nor had appellant inquired about the source of the merchandise. On cross-examination, Bloom admitted that he had been granted immunity from prosecution for the breaking in this case if he would testify. He also admitted that he had been convicted for another felony, burglary, committed after the Stumpf crime, but before the trial.
Officer Ralph Wright of the Baltimore City Police Department testified concerning Carter’s arrest. Officer Wright said he received certain information concerning the breaking, and based on that information, obtained two warrants,- including one for the appellant. Wright approached Carter on the street on January 20, informed him of the warrant for his arrest, but allowed him to remain at large for two days because his mother-in-law was dying.
Carter testified in his own defense, stating he was 22 years of age, had completed high school, attended one
Appellant contends there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction. There is no disagreement between the State and the appellant as to the four elements of receiving stolen goods:
(1) The property must be received;
(2) At the time of receipt it must be stolen property;
(3) The receiver must have guilty knowledge that it is stolen property; and
(4) The receiver’s intent must be fraudulent.
Cobb v. State,
The trial judge, as the finder of facts, believed the witness Bloom that he had in fact stolen the gun and sold it to Carter and found the circumstances of the sale sufficient to show a guilty knowledge or scienter, on the part of the purchaser, Carter. He pointed to Carter’s unconvincing denial of the purchase to support his finding.
Generally, disbelieving evidence provides no basis for finding evidence to the contrary; however, there is an exception involving
scienter
or guilty knowledge,
i.e.,
reasons for disbelieving a denial of
scienter
may provide a basis for finding
scienter. Hayette v. State,
The rule concerning finding scienter in no way affects other aspects of criminal law. The State still has the burden of proof; and the defendant is still presumed innocent and does not have to prove his innocence. He may remain silent without comment on that silence. The defendant may, if he wishes, testify in his defense. If he does so, ordinarily, disbelieving his testimony is not the same as finding positive evidence to the contrary, except the permissibility of finding scienter based on the defendant’s denial of scienter.
In order to find a defendant’s story so inherently improbable as to justify finding scienter from defendant’s denial, there must be some additional circumstance establishing the inherent improbability of defendant’s denial. If defendant merely denied all guilty knowledge and no evidence, from either the defense or the State, put that denial in the position of being more than merely dis-believable, a finding of scienter from such a denial will not be allowed to stand. Since the finding of Scienter from a denial of it is a concept of some subtlety, it must appear in the record what circumstances the trial court relied upon in elevating a denial by the defendant from being merely disbelievable to the status of justifying a finding of scienter.
An alibi or explanation by defendant after his accusation may justify the finding of
scienter
if defendant denies all knowledge of the inculpatory circumstances when it would be practically impossible for defendant to be as
Similarly, changes in defendant’s explanation or conflicting admissions may support a finding of
scienter,
since while either of defendant’s stories may be true, both cannot be and the changes indicate an attempt to hide the guilty knowledge.
Wilson v. State, supra, Fisher v. State, supra, Moore v. State, supra, People v. Lobb,
While the majority rule allows, within the limitations of this opinion, the finding of
scienter
from its denial, at least one state does not allow the finding,
State v. Taylor,
In the instant case to justify the finding of
scienter
from the disbelief of defendant’s denial, the trial judge relied on defendant’s total inability to account in his testimony for his activities on the day of the sale of the pistol. This is permissible when it is noted that appellant was first approached by the police within five days of the sale and, while claiming to have been at work, he was unable to remember anything he had done on that day. The idea that a man who was intelligent enough to
Admittedly, it is an abstract concept to differentiate between false stories that may be merely disbelieved and those that justify a finding directly to the contrary based on the disbelief; but the line between guilt and innocence is not always clearly marked and in those cases, as here, where the line is fine or indistinct it is the duty of the trial court to determine where guilt or innocence lies. In this case, we cannot say the trial court was clearly erroneous in using the defendant’s testimony to support the verdict or in finding scienter based on the other testimony. We point to this evidence: (1) Carter agreed to purchase a pistol from a fifteen year old boy he had just met on the street; (2) The sale was consummated in a .rest room; (3) The merchandise purchased was a pistol; and (4) There was no inquiry as to the origin of the merchandise.
Judgment affirmed.
Appellant to pay the costs.
