Opinion by
Two dwelling houses in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, were burglarized sometime between Decern *282 ber 2 and December 7, 1960. 1 Several articles were stolen therefrom, including a camera and a pair of binoculars. On December 10, 1960, for reasons unconnected with the said burglaries, police officers of the City of Philadelphia searched the automobile of Michael Paul Chatary, in the City of Philadelphia, County of Philadelphia, and found certain of the aforementioned stolen articles therein. As a result, Chatary was later indicted in Montgomery County on charges of burglary, larceny and receiving stolen goods.
Chatary was tried on the indictments on April 27 and August 7, 1961, in Montgomery County before a judge without a jury. He was found guilty on the indictments charging the crime of receiving stolen goods, but not guilty on the burglary and larceny indictments. He was sentenced on October 23, 1961, to a term of imprisonment in the county prison of from two and one-half to five years.
At trial, the only evidence offered by the Commonwealth to connect Chatary with the crimes charged was his possession of the stolen goods in Philadelphia County, as discovered by the Philadelphia police in the manner hereinbefore related. Chatary testified and denied involvement in the crimes charged and offered testimony in explanation of the presence of the stolen goods in his automobile. The trial judge found the defendant’s denial “incredible” and his explanation of the possession “fantastic.” Nevertheless, he acquitted him of the burglary and larceny charges.
No question as to the lack of proof of venue was specifically raised at trial, although the defendant did demur to the Commonwealth’s evidence, which was overruled. The question was first presented specifically in a post trial motion seeking a new trial, which *283 was denied. An appeal to tlie Superior Court from the judgment of sentence was quashed for failure to file within the prescribed time.
On March 14, 1963, this action in habeas corpus was instituted in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County and dismissed after hearing. On appeal, the Superior Court affirmed,
The reason assigned for the issuance of the writ is that the evidence at trial did not establish that the commission of the crime occurred in the county wherein the conviction took place.
It is, of course, the law that “the locus of a crime is always in issue, for the court has no jurisdiction of the offense unless it occurred within the county of trial, or unless, by some statute, it need not ....”:
Commonwealth v. Mull,
But while evidence of such possession is, in itself, sufficient to warrant a jury in finding that the defendant is guilty of the crime of receiving stolen goods,, it is not, in itself, sufficient to establish jurisdiction and venue, where, as here, the possession in the defendant was found in another county. While it is true that venue may be proved by circumstantial evidence (2 Wharton, Criminal Evidence §928 (11th ed. 1985)), the record herein fails to disclose any circumstance (other than the possession) upon which an inference of venue could be based. While the possession does give rise to an inference of guilt, it does not, in itself, and should not, under the circumstances presented, permit an inference that the goods were received in the county in which they were stolen. This would be contrary to logic and practical experience, especially in these days of rapid transportation and communication.
Moreover, as above noted, the possession gives rise to a rebuttable inference only. When the trial court found the defendant “not guilty” of the burglaries and larcenies, this finding established conclusively that the defendant was not at the scene of these crimes, either as a ■ principal or an accessory. Since Montgomery County’s connection v/ith the crime, for which the defendant was convicted, was limited, under the evidence, to the fact that the burglaries and larcenies occurred there', the above finding by the court destroyed the only evidentiary lint connecting the defendant with the reception of the goods in that county. The trial evidence was, therefore, insufficient to establish proper venue and jurisdiction. ■
The'Commonwealth’s position in these proceedings, which was sustained by the lower courts, is that the
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question in issue cannot be raised collaterally in habeas corpus. It is true that the question of lack of jurisdiction of a trial court should, as a general rule, be reviewed by appellate proceedings and not by means of habeas corpus. However, the question may be raised in habeas corpus where the lack of jurisdiction is “clear and undisputable” on the face of the record,
Commonwealth ex rel. Ritchey v. McHugh,
It may be asserted that the verdict of guilty necessarily included a finding that the crime was committed where laid in the indictment and is, therefore, conclusive thereof. While there are statements in several cases to support this contention (See, e.g.,
Commonwealth v. Bubnis,
While it is true that in the cases just cited the issue of jurisdiction was challenged at the trial, in the *286 instant case the sufficiency of the Commonwealth’s evidence was questioned by the demurrer. This challenge necessarily included the proof of jurisdiction.
The orders of the courts below are reversed and the record is remanded to the court of original jurisdiction with directions to issue the writ.
