Opinion by
These appeals are from the judgment of sentence by the defendant-appellants, Thomas R. Tatro and James McKenzie, by the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County after conviction of the charges of conspiracy and possession of burglary tools; and by the Commonwealth from the order of the said court arresting judgment on a burglary conviction.
The facts are as follows: On the evening of September 18, 1969, Officer James J. Callos of the Lower Merion Township Police Department observed a vehicle, occupied by four (4) white males traveling through the Penn Valley area, and as the vehicle was moving
The officer then stopped the vehicle and requested the operator Edward Loney, to produce his operator’s license and owner’s registration. The defendant McKenzie was seated in the rear of the car, on the left, the officer was able to observe a walkie-talkie in an open box adjacent to where McKenzie was sitting and who was engaged in trying to push the box under the front seat.
Officer Harner of the same police department approached the vehicle from the rear and observed a number of items being thrown from the vehicle. He retrieved flashlights, gloves, a radio antenna and a screwdriver. The defendants together with the other two occupants were arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit burglary and possession of burglary tools.
It was then determined through laboratory tests that the screwdriver taken from the car was used in a burglary that took place on September 17, 1969, in the same area. As a result of this, the defendants were also charged with burglary and larceny and were tried for these crimes at the same time.
The jury convicted the defendants on all counts. The defendants filed motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment. The post-trial motions growing out of the September 18th circumstances were denied. But the court below granted the motion in arrest of judgment on the burglary and larceny charge.
The defendants contend that the police had no right to stop the vehicle in which they were passengers and, therefore, had no right to observe the equipment in the vehicle or retrieve the articles abandoned so that their petition to suppress all the evidence should have been granted. We cannot agree. The police did not
The items of burglary equipment taken from the car on the side where Tatro was sitting were abandoned. Abel v. U.S.,
In Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 22,
It is also contended that the court erred in permitting the trial of the burglary and larceny count with the other charges as one occurred the day before the other. Trial courts have wide discretion in the trial of cases before them and as to whether to join or sever trials which involve the same defendant. The burglary and larceny indictments involved the same defendants and they appeared to bear a close relationship to one another. The consolidation did not amount to a manifest abuse of discretion.
In Commonwealth v. One 1958 Plymouth Sedan,
As the court below put it: “In logical sequence, defendants next challenge the search of the vehicle in which they were riding and the seizure of various evidentiary items therefrom. At the very threshold of these considerations, the Court must evaluate the applicability of the plain view doctrine: objects unexpectedly falling into the sight of a police officer who had a right to be where he could make the observation are subject to seizure and subsequent introduction into evidence. Stanley v. Georgia,
The Commonwealth appealed from the order of the court below arresting judgment on the burglary-larceny charge. In passing upon a motion in arrest of judgment following conviction the sufficiency order must be evaluated upon the entire trial record and the evidence must be read in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth and the Commonwealth is entitled to all reasonable inferences arising therefrom. Commonwealth v. Tabb,
The only evidence to connect appellants to the burglary-larceny which occurred twenty-four (24) hours prior to their arrest was the screwdriver. Who possessed it or used it previously is pure conjecture and the court below properly arrested judgment.
The evidence, when considered in its entirety, substantiates the conspiracy and possession charges. The gloves, flashlights, walkie-talkie, screwdriver, etc. together constitute the tools of a modern burglar and in this case were intended to be used for that purpose. The possession and control of these items has already been discussed.
Judgment of sentence is affirmed. Order in arrest of judgment is affirmed.
