Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The appellant, Henry Moore, was indicted, tried, convicted and sentenced to confinement, in the penitentiary, for a term of two years, for the crime of feloniously breaking the dwelling bouse of one Foster and feloniously taking away and stealing therefrom a watch and fifty cents in money. He appeals and asks, that the judgment be reversed upon the following grounds:
(1) “The verdict is against the evidence and is not sustained by a sufficiency of evidence.”
(2) The court erred in admitting incompetent evl" dence against him,
(a) The evidence upon which the conviction was bad consisted altogether of the proof of circumstances, but, when it is all considered together, the verdict is
(b) The evidence, which is complained of as being prejudicial, is the proof of the breaking of the dwelling houses of Mrs. Miller, Sullivan and Hutchens, and the rule of criminal procedure is involked which prohibits the proof being made against one on trial for a crime of the guilt of other crimes. This is a general rule, which applies to the admission of evidence, in a criminal trial, and its violation is always prejudicial, when the propriety of its admission does not fall within one of the exceptions to the rule, but, when the state of case allows one of the exceptions to the rule, the exception has the same force and is as valid as the rule itself, and in fact the exceptions constitute a general rule of evidence. The rule embodying the exceptions is thus stated in Clary v. Commonwealth, 163 Ky. 48, “When one is being tried for a crime the relevancy of the proof of other crimes of which he has been guilty, is only in cases
In the instant case, the proof of the crime of breaking into and stealing from the dwelling of Poster was proven, but, it was necessary to a conviction to prove that the accused was the individual, who did it. The breaking into the house of Hutchens was done in a similar way and for a similar purpose to the breaking into the house of Poster. The crimes were all committed in point of time, within the space of an hour and in the immediate neighborhood of each other, showing a systematic plan of criminal actions, and all fairly attributable to the same person. The evidence was relevant and competent as conducing to prove the identity of the perpetrator of the crime at Poster’s, with that at Hutchens’, whom the evidence conduced to prove was the accused. The principle above stated has been upheld by this court, in addition to the two cases mentioned, in Thomas v. Commonwealth, 1 R. 122; Tye v. Commonwealth, 3 K. L. R. 59; O’Brien v. Commonwealth, 24 K. L. R. 2511; Jenkins v. Commonwealth, 167 Ky. 544 and Richardson v. Commonwealth, 166 Ky. 570. That none of the evidence admitted was prejudicial to appellant’s substantial rights is readily apparent when it is observed, that the jury fixed his punishment at the minimum allowed by law.
The judgment is affirmed.