The issue on Tilley’s exceptions is whether there was evidence to permit the judge who sat without a jury to find that Tilley on August 16, 1967, “did break” as well as enter Kathleen Dolan’s dwelling house. There was evidence that Tilley was discovered with Stephen Roukas in the house about 11:15 a.m. by Walter C. Dolan, son of the owner, and that Mrs. Dolan had left the house about 10:45 a.m. with both front and rear doors locked. Walter Dolan entered by unlocking the front door. He saw Roukas descending the stairs from the second floor. He chased Roukas into the dining room and saw Tilley in the *508 rear vestibule where the rear wooden door was open and the screen door was closed. Tilley pushed open the screen door, ran out and was pursued and caught by Dolan. As Dolan had approached the front door before entering he had heard the rear bell ring about twenty times in rapid succession. There was no evidence whether the windows of the house were open or had screens. There was no evidence that the rear lock was forced, or how the lock operated, or that any lock-slipping device was found. The proof thus did not foreclose the possibility that entrance had been through an open window.
“In this Commonwealth the opening of a closed but unlocked door or window is a breaking. . . . But passing through an unobstructed entrance is not.”
Commonwealth
v.
Lewis,
The reasonable inference was that for the intruders to enter in the course of their joint enterprise one dr both had moved to a material degree something that barred the way. This, we rule, was a breaking. See the
Lewis
case,
supra.
Compare
Commonwealth
v.
Domanski,
There is nothing in Tilley’s suggestion that the Commonwealth was bound to show that the door had not been left open by someone else who had entered in the interval after Mrs. Dolan had left the house.
We do not reach the point made by the Commonwealth that the breaking out through the screen door was sufficient evidence of a break to support the charge. See
State
v.
Kohlfuss,
Exceptions overruled.
