66 A.2d 473 | Md. | 1949
Henry Douglas Newton was indicted, tried and convicted in the Circuit Court for Prince George's County of receiving stolen goods, and sentenced to two years in the Maryland House of Correction. After motions for a new trial and for "reconsideration and modification of sentence" were overruled, he appeals here. It is stipulated that the only question to be raised on appeal is whether there was evidence sufficient for the court to find that the stolen goods received by the appellant were "over the value of $25.00", as alleged in the indictment. *202
It was admitted that in the early morning of May 31, 1948, the store of Charles Lampkin was broken into and some $800 worth of whiskey, of standard brands, was taken. About 4 A.M. Newton and a companion sold four bottles, each containing one-fifth of a gallon, of this same whiskey to a witness, Cully, for $10.00, out of a sack containing other bottles of an unspecified number. The court indicated, in its opinion, that it inferred from the testimony that the contents of the sack were worth more than $25.00. The appellant contends that this inference was unwarranted; that the indictment was based upon sec. 548, Art. 27 of the Code, carrying a maximum penalty of ten years, not under sec. 549 of Art. 27, carrying a maximum penalty of eighteen months.
The record is utterly devoid of objection to any ruling of the court prior to the judgment and sentence. Cf. Davis v. State,
Appeal dismissed, with costs. *203