delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе plaintiffs in error were indicted, tried and convicted for receiving stolen property of the value of more than $60. For this offense the jury fixed their punishment at not more than seven years confinement in the State Prison. It is from this judgment that the plaintiffs in error have seasonably perfected their appeals. Excellent briefs have been filed on both sides and a very able argument heard on behalf of thе plaintiffs in error. We have studied this record, the briefs and read all authorities cited and made quite an independent investigation, because of the particular interest related to some of the questions involved. Having done this we now have the matter for determination.
*300 On September 2, 1954, at noon a traffic policeman on duty at Capitol Boulevard and Cbureh Street in Nashville noticed two men running down, in а westwardly direction, Cbureh Street. It was a rather hot day and he made some jocular remark about their speed. Immediately after he had seen these men, he saw Mr. Mallernee, a merchant of Nashville, running after them and calling to passersby, “Stop that thief”. The police officer immediately gave chase to one of these two men who turned out to be Ellsworth, the only person that he saw at the time and after capturing Ellsworth back of the Savoy Hotel on Seventh Avenue he took him back to Mr. Mal-lernee’s store.
In the meantime the other man ran into Castner-Knott’s store and an officer who was in this store on a shoplifting detail saw a commotion near the store and ran up and he and Mr. Mallernee caught Liakas. At the time they caught Liakas he was carrying a valise or bag. This bag that Liakas had in his possession contained two suits of clothes which Mr. Mallernee claimed to have been stolen from his store. The officer in company with Mr. Mallernee took Liakas to an anteroom at Castner-Knott’s to search him for weapons. In the process of this search, he saw Li-akas take a parking ticket out of his shirt pocket and undertake to swallow this claim check. This officer then grabbed Liakas by the hand and prevented him from swallowing the check which proved to be a claim check for a car parked in the Cain-Sloan Parking Garage. The officer and Mr. Mallernee then took Liakas back to Mr. Mal-lernee’s store where they found the police officer had already arrived with Ellsworth. Both the officer Elliott who was in Castner-Knott’s and the traffic policeman testify that when they reached this point, or that is, as they came in the store Mallernee and Elliott with Liakas, *301 that Ellsworth offered Mr. Mallernee $1,000' to drop the prosecntion bnt Mr. Mallernee very indignantly said he would not do it for $10,000.
After this was done Elliott the officer who was at Cast-ner-Knott’s store took the claim tag to the car which was parked in the parking lot and without a search warrant went to this parking lot and after а conference with the manager of the parking lot he was taken to where the car was stored there. The officer’s testimony is that when he approached the car he could see through the windows a great number of men’s suits, some in zipper bags and others lying loose on the seat. He also noticed that some of the clothes had no cuffs on the trousers. After examining this for some length this offiсer took the car and drove it'back up to Mr. Mallernee’s store where he in company with others investigated the contents of the car. Among the men’s clothing found in this car was a suit which the authorities of Levy Brothers store in Memphis undertook, in the instant lawsuit, to identify as one that had come from their store.
The instant suit grew out of a doublebarrel indictment for stealing and for receiving stolen goods, that is, the suit which Levy Brothers claimed came from their store. A Mr. Davis, one of the partners in Levy Brothers, testifies that on or about September 1,1954, or the day before these plaintiffs in error were caught in Nashville that the plaintiffs in error came into Levy Brothers store in Memphis and Liakas purchased a pair of socks. He also testifies that while Liakas was looking at these socks that Ellsworth was in another part оf the store where men’s suits were hung on racks and that he took several of these suits off of the rack and examined them and looked at them. After Liakas had purchased his socks he asked where the dressing room was and went into the *302 dressing room to put these socks on. It seems that when he went into the dressing room to do that he had a suitcase with him and he stayed in that dressing room for some 20 or 25 minutes. At this time though, that is, Sеptember 1, 1954, the day before these two men were caught here in Nashville, there was apparently no suspicion attached to these plaintiffs in error, that is when they were in Levy Brothers store in Memphis.
The suit in question in this lawsuit was of a make and pattern carried by Levy Brothers store. The testimony is to the effect that the manufacturers of this suit make up an order of clothes for various retailers and put in it a label designating the store from which it was bought. This label had been cut out of the suit in question. In addition thereto, upon a tag on this suit there was undecipherable writing. Mr. Davis testified that a notation had been made on a suit by one of the clerks of the name of a prospective customer for whom it was being held. After the discovery of this suit in the possession of the plaintiffs in error, Levy Brothers records were сhecked by Mr. Davis and it was found that a suit of this precise description was missing from their stock and that the record contained no notation that this suit had ever been sold in the usual course of business. There was also testimony introduced, strenuously and seriously objected to, to the effect that in this car there was found a suit stolen from a Mr. Daniels in Memphis.
This rather long recitation of the facts of this case is necessary to arrive at the questions here presented. The very obvious assignment is that there was not adequate identification of thé suit alleged to have been taken from Levy Brothers; and that it was error for the trial court to permit testimony as to the search of the automobile in Nashville and that the admission of the testimony of *303 Daniels abont Ms snits being in this pile which was stolen from his store are all snch harmful errors as to require this Court to reverse the case. There are other incidental things or questions presented'herein but these all more or less revolve around the three questions last above mentioned and will all be discussed in the course of this opinion without taking up the assignments seriatim.
The question presented by the brief, so ably argued in oral argument, is that the evidence was not adequate for the jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that this suit was the one missing from Levy Brothers store in Memphis. The evidence, it is true, is circumstantial but it is well settled in this State that the corpus delicti in criminal cases as well as in others may be proven by circumstantial evidence.
Ford
v. State,
The trial jury had before it the fact that a suit of clothes of the character and make here shown to the jury was missing from Levy Brothers store and that the inventory showed that such a suit had been purchased by them and that their sales record failed to disclose that it had ever been sold in the normal course of events. The jury also had befоre it the testimony that the two plain *304 tiffs-in error were in this store not too long before the loss of - this suit was discovered and that one of them was seen to take a number "of suits off of one of the racks in the store; Tim jury likewise had evidence to the effect that the missing suit was manufactured by the same manufacturer and of the same pattern as the one found in the possession of the plaintiffs in error. Of course the finding of: this suit in the possession of the plaintiffs in error, and whether- or not it could be offered in evidence will be dealt with very soon in our treatment of whether or not this could have been offered in evidence.
The plaintiffs in error both claimed that the car in which the suits were found was not theirs but they had in their possession the parking ticket for this car and it is shown that the car was registered in Liakas’ wife’s name.
The jury had evidence that the retailers label had been.cut out of this suit and it was likewise evident that these suits still had the trouser legs unfinished and there were no cuffs on them, in other words, that they were not finished up ready for wear for a man to be hauling them around in a car for his own use. The jury of course could draw from their knowledge of these things that whenever a suit was sold through legitimate channels in a store that'' the trousers аre cut and made to fit the purchaser and-that the cuff is put on. On this suit there was some kind' of a tag which Davis claimed had some significance as.showing that the suit belonged to Levy Brothers. Davis produced one of his regular stock tags and testified that it is identical with the tag found upon this suit and he showed it as far as the court could find out, with some-undecipherable notation upon the tag that was in the suit. It seems to us that clearly in the absence of testimony to the contrary, these circumstances were sufficient to warrant the trial jury in concluding that this suit which was *305 fornad in -this car was one that had been stolen from Levy Brothers store.
This evidence, of course, that we have reviewed above, is that that is most favorable to the State in proving that the suit came from Levy Brothers. On a question of the kind here that is the evidencе that we look to. We are not weighing the evidence and comparing it with the evidence otherwise since the jury has determined in favor of the State on this evidence.
When there is material evidence offered in a case it is not our province to substitute our inferences for those drawn by the jury in cases of circumstantial evidence. These inferences are for the jury to draw.
Stanley
v.
State,
The very able argument is made that the search of the car wherein the suit here in question was found was unlawful, that it was a general exploratory search, mаde solely in the hope of finding evidence — any evidence— which might connect these defendants with any crime. It is said and very reasonably and well said that the officers here had a reasonable and ample opportunity to obtain a search warrant for this car. It is said that no reason is apparent for the officers’ failure to do so, except the wholly inadequate ones that it wаs less troublesome and more expedient to proceed to search the car without a warrant. Thus it is forcefully argued that the search was an unreasonable one within the constitutional prohibition against unreasonable searches. And it is only when the
*306
search is unreasonable that it becomes unlawful.
Templeton
v.
State,
In most States, as in Tennessee, a search may be made without a warrant when there is a lawful arrest.
Elliott
v.
State,
We said before that the kind of a search that was obnoxious was an unreasonable search. The authors of American Jurisprudence in Volume 47 thereof at page 532 under Searches and Seizures say this: .
*307 “An unreasonable search has therefore been defined as an examination or inspection without authority of law of one’s premises or person, with a view to the discovery of stolen, contraband, or illicit property, or for some evidence of guilt, to be used in the prosecution of a criminal action.”
This brings us to the facts of the instant case. Here the officers had arrested the plaintiffs in error for committing a felony. It is apparent that while thus under arrest one of the plaintiffs in error attempted to dispose of this parking lot ticket. Their flight before they were caught was a part of the commission of this felony of grand larceny. When the plaintiffs in error had been arrested for the commission of this felony and this incriminating document which he sought to destroy having-been found on him clearly; the officer should make a further investigation.as to what he would find as a result of this information which was attempted to be destroyed. It seems to us that this clearly was information or an indicаtion to the officer that these parties were trying to dispose of this in an act to cover up other felonies that they were in the process of committing. Thus with this in vi.ew this officer went to this car and obtained the information above detailed. Naturally it was probable, and was right, for the officer to conclude, and the officer might have concluded, that this ticket was to a stolen automobile, аnother felony. When the officer got there though he found these clothes which had been stolen. In other words the ticket was the direct information for the fact that another felony, other than that for which they had been arrested, had then and was being committed in his presence which under Code Sections 11536,11541 (Williams’ Annotated Code) would clearly warrant this officer in making this investigation.
A case very much in point is that of
State
v.
Cyr,
40
*308
Wash. (2d.) 840,
It is very forcefully and ably argued that the trial court committed error in admitting testimony of Mr. Daniels to the effect that four of these suits which were in this car belonged to his company because it is said that *309 this was erroneously admitted because it comes within that rnle prohibiting the proof of other crimes.
In 20 Ami. Jur., pаge 287, Sec. 309, Evidence, the following very sonnd and general rnle is thus stated:
“A person, when placed upon trial for the commission of an offense against the criminal laws, is to be convicted, if at all, on evidence showing his gnilt . of the particular offense charged in the indictment against him. It is a well-established common-law rnle that in criminal prosecution proof which shows or tends to show that the accused is guilty of the commission of other crimes and offenses at other times, even though they are of the same nature as the one charged in the indictment, is incompetent and inadmissible for the purpose of showing the commission of the particular crime charged, unless the other offenses are connected with the offense for which he is on trial.”
This rule has many well recognized exceptions as is sаid by the annotator of 125 A. L. R., at page 1036:
‘ ‘ Thus, evidence of other crimes may be admissable for purposes of identifying the defendant, or for establishing a mental state, such as guilty knowledge, motive, or intent on the part of the defendant, or for establishing a common scheme or plan for the commission of several crimes so related to each other that proof of one tends to establish thе others.”
Among the many exceptions to this rule are several Tennessee cases involving different states of fact. The case of
Sykes
v. State,
We have given this case very careful consideration. We feel after this investigation that clearly there is no reversible error in the record and the judgment below must be affirmed with costs.
