11 N.Y. 591 | NY | 1874
The plaintiff in error was convicted of receiving property, knowing it to have been stolen. He was a pawnbroker, and seems to have been a man of fair standing and reputation. We are restricted to a consideration of the legal questions presented.
The conversation between Robinson and the accused, upon the previous occasions when property was received, was objected to, and its reception is claimed to be error. The conversation constituted a portion of the circumstances attending the receipt of the property upon the former occasions, and was competent upon the good faith of the accused. It is claimed that there was no evidence that the prior receipts were with a guilty knowledge, but the circumstances including the conversation were sufficient to go to the jury on that question. The fact that the property was salable merchandise, having a market value, and was offered for one-third that value, and that the‘offers to sell were repeated from time to time, were circumstances of an unusual character, calculated to excite the suspicion of an honest man, and the remarks of the accused on one or two occasions, as testified to by Robinson, tended, if true, to show that he believed that the property had been stolen, and from the same place. The evidence that the pawn tickets, given on the first two occasions, were sold to the accused by Robinson, was objected to, because such sale would establish a violation of the city-ordinance which prohibits licensed pawnbrokers from buying property, which, it is said, is a misdemeanor, and an independent offence. It was competent to prove a sale of the tickets and a sale of the property, on the question of guilty knowledge. A pawn of property at one-third its value would be no evidence that it was stolen, and the court so
The evidence that the accused was a licensed pawnbroker, and that the city ordinance prohibited such brokers from buying property, was not competent, because the only effect of it was to show the prisoner guilty of an offence in no way connected with this; but that evidence was not objected to, nor is there any exception which covers it, and we cannot consider it, nor was it very material.
The case was fairly submitted to the jury, and they have decided upon conflicting evidence, against the accused, and, whether just or not, it is not our province to review their finding upon the facts; and as we cannot see that any error of law was committed, the judgment must be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.
55 N. Y., 81.