250 Mass. 454 | Mass. | 1925
The defendant was charged with being an accessory after the fact to breaking and entering and the larceny of fifty-two rolls of cloth. He was tried jointly with one DelGrosso, who was convicted as principal.
There was evidence that the shop of one Max Doctoroff, in Cambridge, was broken into and fifty-eight rolls of cloth taken away between the hours of two and thirty minutes after two on the morning of July 28, 1923; that about forty or forty-five minutes after two o’clock on the same morning, a Packard automobile driven by DelGrosso and containing another man was seen by police officers in Merrimac Square, Boston, approaching from Cambridge and moving at the rate of thirty to thirty-five miles an hour; that the officers failed to stop the car, but followed it and in about four or five minutes came upon it in front of 124 Prince Street; that two rolls of the cloth were found in the stairway at number 124 Prince Street, ten rolls just inside the door, and three rolls at the top of the cellar stairs; that the Packard car was “ filled from the floor up to about the door or a little past”; that DelGrosso, when the officers appeared, was in the doorway of the Prince Street premises, “ without hat or coat ”; and that he ran into the building and was finally captured.
There was evidence that, when the Packard car was found on Prince Street, the defendant was standing near a Dort touring car, directly across the street from number 124 Prince Street; that he was asked who owned the Packard car, and he said he did not know, and also stated that he did not know
There was evidence that “ it was a nasty night and it had been raining ”; that the Dort car was an open car; that the defendant and DelGrosso had often been seen together. There was no evidence that either the defendant or DelGrosso lived at 124 Prince Street. The defendant testified that he sat down in the Dort car because he thought the Packard car would pass through Prince Street on its way to the garage, about one hundred and fifty feet distant from where the Dort car stood; that he fell asleep; that he had not been in Cambridge that night and had no part in the transaction. “ He had nothing to do with the loading or unloading of that car or driving it into Boston and had no connection with it whatsoever.” On cross-examination he stated that he saw DelGrosso between seven and eight o’clock in front of his (the defendant’s) house when DelGrosso left in the Packard machine. He denied that he saw DelGrosso at six o’clock. He testified that the Packard car was kept in the “ open air garage.” There was also testi
The defendant’s request for a directed verdict and his motion that a verdict of guilty be set aside, were denied, to which rulings the defendant excepted. G. L. c. 274, § 4, provides, “Whoever . . . after the commission of a felony, harbors, conceals, maintains or assists the principal felon ... or gives such offender any other aid, knowing that he has committed a felony . . . with intent that he shall avoid or escape detention, arrest, trial or punishment, shall be an accessory after the fact.”
There was evidence showing the commission of a felony by DelGrosso. He was seen by the police officers in the early morning, driving an automobile at a high rate of speed, in company with another man. A few moments afterward he was found without hat or coat; -some of the stolen goods had been taken into the house, the remainder were in the automobile he had been driving, and across the street the defendant Spezzaro was found standing near another automobile. He had been frequently seen in the company of DelGrosso; he was with him the night preceding his arrest. They jointly owned the Packard automobile. .The defendant contended that two men were with DelGrosso. He denied that he knew DelGrosso, that he knew any one who was in the Packard automobile, or knew who owned it. If these statements, made by the defendant at the time of his arrest, were intentionally false, they tended to show his guilt. The weight of this evidence was for the jury. But evidence of this kind is an admission from which guilt may be inferred. Commonwealth v. Devaney, 182 Mass. 33, 36. Commonwealth v. Bond, 188 Mass. 91, 93, 94. Commonwealth v. Hartford, 193 Mass. 464, 469.
Many of the assertions made by the defendant the jury could have found were intentionally false and misleading. On the evidence, in connection with the fact that the jury could refuse to believe the explanation given by the defendant as a reason for his being at this particular place, at this early hour of the morning, in the presence of his companion, with a large part of the stolen property in their automobile,
Exceptions overruled.