272 Mass. 107 | Mass. | 1930
The defendants McCarthy, Burke and Cotter were found guilty on an indictment charging conspiracy to steal the property of persons unknown. The defendants asked for specifications of time and the place “where the alleged crime was committed.” The Commonwealth answered, that it was unable to specify the exact date on which the conspiracy was formed “but it was somewhere in the vicinity of August 1, 1929, when a conspiracy was formed in the city of Cambridge or its vicinity.” The case is before us on the exceptions of McCarthy and Cotter.
There was evidence from police officer Falvey that he was assigned to Station 2; that the defendants, who were police officers, were assigned to the same station in August, 1929; that early in the morning of August 21, he went into a garage on his route and found the defendants there; that a sedan automobile stood on the wash stand and McCarthy was spraying it with water and held a hose in his hand, Burke was to the left of the automobile and Cotter was “alongside a five-gallon can which was on the running board of” a truck; that when the witness came in sight, a hose running into the five-gallon can “was taken out by Cotter,” the can was seized by Burke, who put it in the sedan, and the hose was thrown into the back of the automobile; that when the hose was taken from the can and thrown into the sedan “it sprayed gasoline all over the front; that there was an impression of this can on the running board of the truck and gasoline was dripping down underneath this running board”; that Burke was, asked “What are you doing, filling up again?” and he answered, “Yes”; that Cotter said “is it any of your . . . business”; that the witness said “You have been warned by me to
The defendants moved for directed verdicts; their motions were denied; the defendants excepted. These three men were found at night in the garage in question; they had the appliance for taking the gasoline. One was apparently washing the automobile while the other two were siphoning the gasoline out of the gas tank on the truck into a five-gallon can, which they put into their automobile and took away. They were not strangers to each other. A can and hose were found in each car. They denied that they were present when the gasoline was stolen. It could have been found on all the evidence that by a prearranged plan they were all present, engaged in a scheme to steal the gasoline from the owner; that there was a mutual understanding and the defendants were acting together for a common end to accomplish a crime. Attorney General v.
The indictment stated that the defendants on the fifteenth of August, 1929, conspired together to commit thereafter "from time to time and on different occasions as opportunity therefore [jsic] should offer and not any time then particularly set and fixed, the crime of stealing.” The specifications stated the conspiracy was formed "somewhere in the vicinity of August 1,” that the Commonwealth was unable to specify the exact date. The defendants excepted to the evidence of what was done in the latter part of June or early in July of the same year. The Commonwealth was not bound by any specific date. There was no error in permitting the Commonwealth to introduce evidence of acts connected with the alleged conspiracy. The acts of June or July were not too remote.
On cross-examination of Falvey he was asked if he was afraid that on his story the three defendants would be found not guilty by the police trial board. On the objection of the district attorney the evidence was excluded. There was no error in this ruling. It was immaterial what effect Falvey’s story would have on the trial board or that Falvey was afraid of the effect it might have. It was cross-examination and the evidence might properly be excluded. Commonwealth v. Phelps, 210 Mass. 109, 114.
There was no error in admitting the testimony as to the time it would take "to get from the Main Street Garage to Box 14.” It appeared that “McCarthy pulled Box 14 at 3:40 a.m.,” and Falvey testified it was at this time the defendants left the garage. If McCarthy pulled this box at forty minutes after three o’clock on the morning of August 21 and was going at the rate of twenty miles an hour, it was material to show as the Commonwealth did that the distance could be covered at this rate of speed in fifty-two seconds.
The Commonwealth, because of the cross-examination of
The witness Capibianco testified that sometime in Au- • gust, 1929, three police officers in uniform came in a car to the garage in the early morning. Against the exception of the defendants, the witness testified, in substance, that he said to one of the policemen he could wash his car on the wash stand. The witness was unable to identify the defendants. There was evidence that this witness worked in the garage every night during August, and on another occasion he had seen “three police officers” in uniform drive “their car into” the “garage.” Evidence had already been introduced, showing that the three officers found in the garage were the defendants. If the jury found, as they could have found, that Capibianco saw the officers on the same night that Falvey said they were in the garage, the evidence was admissible.
There was no error in the refusal of the judge to allow the witness. Cavanaro to testify with reference to Falvey’s taking gasoline without paying for it, and driving from his route to procure ice to cool the witness’s beer. This was a collateral matter and could properly be excluded.
The district attorney called as a witness the assistant clerk of the Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex. This court has jurisdiction of appeals by police officers from the trial board of the city of Cambridge. Counsel for the defendants was asked if he proposed to argue that the defendants had been “finally and without appeal, removed from the Cambridge police force”; he answered “I am not going to so argue.” Later, counsel said, “I am going to argue that they have been fired.” The judge then allowed the Commonwealth to show by the records that
Exceptions overruled.