delivered the opinion of the Court.
William McClelland, George M. Stein and Roland F. Mulcahy (McClelland, Stein and Mulcahy, or, collectively, the defendants)—and James B. Gatton (Gatton), better known as
The warehouse of the Apex Express Company (Apex) on Georgetown Road was burglarized in the early morning of February 1, 1959. An eye-witness—the rear of whose home was adjacent to the warehouse—saw two men enter the building and go up the stairway between 2:15 and 2:20 a.m., and saw three men return “with what appeared to be a safe.” Only two of them were carrying the safe. On the way out to the street something must have scared them for they “dropped the safe and two [of them] ran in behind the building which was directly beneath [the eye-witness’] window,” where they waited for a few seconds and then ran to the front of the warehouse and “picked up the safe.” The eye-witness called the police and informed them of what he had observed and when they arrived on the scene he gave them a general description of the clothing worn by the men and boy he had seen.
At about the same time [2:15 a.m.] that the eye-witness was watching these events from the rear of his home, an officer [James Sanders] on his regular route in a post car had noticed an automobile parked approximately one hundred yards from the warehouse and purposely driving slowly by and close to it, he was able to observe the make, colors, year model and the fact that it had a “sprung hood.” At the same time he saw “one subject behind the steering wheel” and another outside “on the passenger side.” He continued on his route, but when he received a call over the police radio a few minutes later that “someone was with a safe” in the 3200 block of Georgetown Road, he returned immediately to the warehouse where he interviewed the eye-witness and his wife. Within only a minute or two thereafter a police sergeant
When the message was received by Officer John Mc-Gahagan he was sure that the description of the automobile as a two-tone blue and cream or white Buick fit that of an automobile claimed by McClelland, whom the officer knew. The broadcast, in addition to informing all officers on patrol that a “safe burglary” had been committed, had also related that there was “more than one” person involved and that one of the suspects had a “dark blue coat, one had a black jacket and one was wearing a brown topcoat.” Upon going to Mc-Clelland’s home and finding him absent, Officer McGahagan and the officer riding with him cruised around until they located the McClelland automobile between 2:35 and 2:40 a.m. “about a half a mile, maybe a mile” from the warehouse. They signaled the operator of the automobile to stop and when Mc-Clelland came over to the prowl car to inquire why he had been stopped, the officer sent him back to his automobile to get his registration card and called for additional assistance. Subsequently he arrested all four suspects. A crow bar, a metal bar, a steel drill, an extension light and cord and some gloves were found in the Buick at the time of arrest.
The defendants, along with Gatton, were taken to the district police station where they were interrogated and their clothing taken for analysis. Rater, such analyses revealed that particles of paint removed from the clothing of McClelland and Stein were in all probability the same as the paint on the first floor point of entry to the warehouse. All of the defendants-appellants conceded that they had been previously convicted of other offenses.
Gatton, a seventeen-year old boy, immediately confessed his
During the course of his interrogation at the station, immediately after his arrest, Mulcahy admitted that he had been in two taverns drinking with McClelland, Stein and Gatton and had then ridden around for awhile but insisted they were going to get something to eat when the police picked them up. But later that same day when he was informed, after he had sobered up, that his companions had made statements, that one of them had pointed out the whereabouts of the safe and that all of them [including Mulcahy] would be charged with the crimes committed, Mulcahy remained silent and refused to say anything. In the oral statements made by both McClelland and Stein following arrest, which were neither confessions nor admissions but absolute denials of any complicity in the breaking and theft, and were admitted in evidence without objection, Mulcahy was identified as being with the other participants during the periods before and after the offenses had been committed. On behalf of himself, Mulcahy testified at the trial that on the night of the burglary he had been drinking heavily, that he left the last tavern they had visited around 1:15 a.m., and did not see his drinking companions again until about 2:30
With respect to the trial of the cases in the lower court, McClelland, in writing, before trial, and all of the defendants-appellants (including McClelland) orally, at the outset of the trial, moved to suppress the evidence to be presented against them on the ground that it had been obtained by illegal search and seizure. The court did not act on the written motion and when the oral motions were made, it neither determined the question then nor ordered it to be deferred for determination at the ensuing trial, but subsequent rulings clearly indicated an intention to reserve the questions. During the course of the introduction of testimony on behalf of the state, all of the defendants specifically objected to the admissibility of the crow bar and other articles (hereinafter referred to as the “burglary tools”) found in the Buick. At this point the court reserved its rulings on that evidence and all articles then objected to were admitted in evidence one after the other without further objection other than a claim that some of the articles had not been sufficiently identified. At another stage in the state’s case a photograph of the trunk of the Chrysler with the safe in it was offered in evidence and admitted, whereupon McClelland renewed his objection “pursuant to” his earlier motion, but, on this occasion, the court did not rule on the objection. There was also testimony by several witnesses that the safe and title to the Chrysler were found on the premises occupied by Mc-Clelland, all of which, as well as another photograph of the safe taken after it had been opened, was admitted in evidence without objection. At a still later stage the results of the analyses of the seized clothing of McClelland and Stein were also admitted in evidence without objection. [The result of the analysis of the clothing of Mulcahy was not incriminating]. Finally, at the conclusion of the state’s case, McClelland moved to renew what appeared to be his motion to suppress the evi
On this appeal all of the defendants contend that such evidence as was obtained as a result of the search of McClelland’s home and automobiles was erroneously admitted in evidence against them. Moreover, McClelland and Stein contend that such evidence as was obtained as a result of the analyses of the clothing they were wearing when arrested was likewise inadmissible. The first question then—particularly with respect to the seized burglary tools and the clothing they were wearing—is whether the arrest of the defendants without a warrant was lawful. The interrelated second question affecting McClelland only, is whether evidence concerning the title to the Chrysler automobile and the stolen safe — which were seized in a search of the premises occupied by him without a warrant—was admissible. By the third and final question presented, only Mulcahy contends that the evidence was insufficient to corroborate the testimony of the accomplice [Gatton], who admitted participation in the burglary.
(i). Legality of Arrest.
The arrest of all of the defendants was lawful. It is true, of course, that Article 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights prohibits the search of suspected places and the seizure of persons or property without a warrant, but this provision of the constitution does not prohibit arrest without a warrant when it is lawful and in cases where the public security demands it. In this state it has long been settled that a peace officer may arrest without a warrant, provided there were reasonable grounds to believe at the time of the arrest that a felony had been committed and that the person arrested had committed the offense.
Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Cain,
Since the defendants had taken and carried away a warehouse safe and its contents of the aggregate value of $100 or more, which constituted a felony, after they had broken into the warehouse with an intent to commit felony therein, which under the statute was a misdemeanor, the real question is whether there was probable cause, that is, whether the arresting officer had such reasonable grounds for suspecting a felony had been committed as justified and required him to make the arrest. There were ample grounds for so believing. Regardless of
when
the actual arrest took place-—-that fact is unimportant in this case—the officer had been informed
before
he signaled the operator of the Buiclc automobile to stop that a safe had been stolen from a warehouse, that more than one
Since the arrests were lawful, it follows that the search of the Buick automobile and seizure of the burglary tools and clothing were likewise lawful. Of course, as was said in United States v. Di Re, 332 U. S. 581, 595 (1948) : “[A] search is not to be made legal by what it turns up. In law it is good or bad when it starts and does not change character from its success.” But in this instance the search was good when it started and it was still good when it turned up the burglary tools and clothing from which the flecks of incriminating paint were taken.
While the Bouse Act [Code (1957), Art. 35, § 5], does prohibit the use of evidence in the trial of certain misdemean
(ii). Admissibility of Other Evidence.
This question affects only McClelland. It concerns the admission into evidence of the automobile title and photographs of the purloined safe and the oral testimony relating to both articles. Obviously, the question presents a different problem from that posed by the admission into evidence of the burglary tools and clothing. Since it is apparent that
In the instant case the defendants (including McClelland) were indicted for a felony [statutory grand larceny] as well as a misdemeanor [statutory burglary], however, McClelland seemingly overlooked that fact in interposing his objections to the evidence concerning the illegally seized title and safe. It is true, of course, that he seasonably moved to suppress all evidence which had been unlawfully obtained, that he objected —for the same reason on which the motion was based—when the first photograph of the safe was offered and admitted, and that he renewed the motion to suppress at the conclusion of the state’s case,
2
but, in so doing, he neither informed the court that his objections were limited to or primarily aimed at the admissibility of the evidence under the misdemeanor count, nor, which would have been more effective, did he request the trial court to instruct the jury that such evidence could be considered only on the felony charge and not on the misdemeanor charge. In short, we think the motions and objections which were made were too broad to entitle McClelland to a review of this question on appeal. While what was done may have met the requirements of Maryland Rule 522 in that it was sufficient to constitute a general objection to the admissibility of the evidence claimed to have been unlawfully
(iii). Sufficiency of Corroboration.
This third question concerns only Mulcahy. His motion for a directed verdict of not guilty—on the ground that the testimony of the accomplice [Gatton] had not been corroborated—was properly refused by the trial court. Recently, in the case of
Wright v. State,
“[I]t still appears that not much in the way of corroboration is required and that it is not necessary in and of itself for the corroborative evidence to be sufficient to convict, yet the corroborative evidence must support the testimony of the accomplice as to some of the material facts tending to show that the accused was either identified with the perpetrators of the crime or had participated in the commission of the crime itself.” (Emphasis added.)
See also 7 Wigmore,
Evidence,
§ 2059c (3rd ed. 1940). Since the sufficiency of corroboration must depend upon the facts and circumstances, and the inferences deducible therefrom, in each case, the question is whether there was evidence in the record, which, with some degree of cogency, tended to establish material and relevant facts sufficient to authorize the jury to give credit to the testimony of the accomplice. We think there was such evidence. While it was true that neither the eye-witness nor the police officer was able to identify Mulcahy as one of the persons at the scene of the burglary, and while it was also true that the analysis of his clothing failed to disclose any particles of paint such as had been found on the clothing of McClelland and Stein, there was other evidence or deducible inferences which were sufficient to corroborate the testimony of the accomplice. Mulcahy’s own statement to the police immediately after his arrest—to the effect that he had been drinking with the other defendants and the accomplice in a tavern, that they left the first one and went to another next door, that after leaving the last one visited they had driven around for awhile, and that they were going to get something to eat when they were picked up by the police, even though he changed his story at the trial to break the continuity of the association—tended to corroborate his presence at the scene of the crime in that he had been with the other three immediately before and immediately after
There was also the fact that the testimony of the non-accomplice witnesses was consistent with that of the accomplice and inconsistent with that of Mulcahy. Wright v. State, supra. Furthermore, as we said in the Wright case [at p. 652] : “corroboration of a material point tending to connect the accused with the crime is sufficient for a jury to infer that the accomplice had testified truthfully even with respect to matters as to which there had been no corroboration.”
We hold that the testimony of the accomplice was sufficiently corroborated to warrant submission of Mulcahy’s case to the jury. The weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses was for the jury to determine. Rule 739 c.
The judgments will be affirmed.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
. The cases cited by the defendants to support their contention that there was no probable cause for making the arrest, such as
Hanna v. United States,
. Under similar circumstances in
Asner v. State,
. The Bouse Act changed the rule only in prosecutions for misdemeanors.
