Opinion by
Thе question here is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction of the appellant on the charges of possession оf burglary tools 1 and violation of the Uniform Firearms Act. 2
William Whitman, James M. Cononico and William N. Graham of Warren, Ohio, were arrested in the Borough of Pleasant Hills, Allegheny County, late on the night оf October 30, 1960, after being stopped by an officer because their automobile’s tail light was not illuminated. The automobile was being operаted by Cononico in whose name it had been licensed in Ohio. When the officer stopped the automobile, Whitman was sitting beside Cononico on the front seat and Graham was sleeping on the back seat. Two loaded revolvers were under the front seat and the 25 articles listed belоw were in the trunk. 3 There could be no doubt that these items, especially when considered together, came within the designation of burglary tools. One of the tools in the trunk was a sledge hammer which, according to the opinion of an expert had been *634 used, in opening a safe in a burglary which was committed in Pittsburgh several weeks before the appellant and his associates were arrested in Pleasant Hills. The three occupants of the automobile were charged with the burglary, possession of burglary tools and violation of the Uniform Firearms Act. They were tried by the cоurt without a jury and found guilty on all charges. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgments were filed. The motion in arrest of judgment on the burglary charge was granted as to Whitman. The motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment on the other two charges against him were denied. The three defendants were sentenced. Whitman alone appealed to this Court.
The sole question before us is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the convictions of Whitman on the two indictments on which he was sentenced.
When the three defendants were arrested, Cononico and Graham indicated their knowledge of the tools in the trunk and gave conflicting stories concerning them. Cononico said that the firearms belonged to him. Whitman said that he knew nothing about the firearms found under the front seat and the tools found in the trunk. Whitman’s conviction cannot be sustained if he had no knowledge that the firearms and tools were in the automobile. But this knowledge need not be proven by his admission of such knowledge, or by testimony of his associates that he saw thеse articles. The defendant’s knowledge of the presence of these articles may be inferred from all the surrounding circumstances.
Inference is a process of reasoning by which a fact or proposition sought to be established (here the prisoner’s knowledge of the presence of the tools in the automobile) is deduced as a logical consequence from other facts, or a state of facts, already proved or admitted.
Simon v.
Fine,
Let us look then, to the “facts, or state оf facts, already proved or admitted.” The defendant and his two friends left their home community in Ohio “late in the evening” and were picked up by pоlice during the night in Allegheny County, approximately a hundred miles away. They said that they were driving from Warren, Ohio, to Cumberland, Maryland, to look for work, but aрparently the judge did not believe this. They were on a joint venture, whether it was going to Cumberland to seek employment, or whether it was going to commit a burglary and break open a safe. The appellant cannot put himself into the class of cases where two persons intent on crime invite an innocent friend to join them for a ride in their automobile.
An examination of the list of the items in the trunk of the car leads one inevitably tо the conclusion that a complete set of burglary tools and accessories were being transported. Furthermore, the presence of the loaded firearms is additional evidence that the tools were intended for an illegal purpose, and the presence of the burglary tools is evidence that the firearms were
*636
intended for nse in connection with, a burglary.
Commonwealth v. Festa,
The appellant was sitting on the seat under which the loaded revolvers were found. He had in his possessiоn a pair of black gloves which the trial judge said were “obviously not designed to afford any protéction from the weather.”
We believe that the trial judge had the right to deduce as a logical consequence from the state of facts proven or admitted that the appellаnt knew that the firearms and burglary tools were in the automobile and that the three defendants intended to use them in a burglary. See
Commonwealth v. Dionisio,
The appellant leans heavily upon
Commonwealth v. Clinton,
We are satisfied that there was sufficient evidence in this case to permit the trial judge to find the appellant guilty.
*637 Judgments of sentences are affirmed, and the defendant, William Whitman, is ordered to appear in the court below at such time as he may bе there called, and that he be by that court committed until he has complied with his sentences or any part of same that have not been рerformed at the time these appeals were made a supersedeas.
Notes
Act of June 24, 1939, P. E. 872, §904, 18 P.S. §4904.
Act of June 24, 1939, P. 1¡. 872, §628, as amended, 18 P.S. §4628.
An acetylene torch with complete tanks, a heavy sledge hammer, one wheel wrench, steel drift pins, two hacksaw blades, one brace and bit, three steel chisels (not wood), two heavy duty screw drivers, one hacksaw complete with blade, one burning tip for torch, one heavy canvas tarpaulin, a can of lubricant, a black сlub, approximately a foot long filled with lead, one ballpeen hammer, two pairs of cloth gloves, one pair of burning goggles, one pair of shoes and socks, one pair of overalls, one blue handkerchief, one pair of blue pants, one gray and red knit sweater, one heavy sweatshirt, iodine swabs, sun glasses, pens.
