97 N.Y.S. 62 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The second count of the indictment upon" which the defendant was’ convicted alleged that on the 27th day of January, 1905, one William Bradley was engaged in removing snow from the public streets of the city of'New York, and for such purpose employed a large number of carts and wagons, paying to the persons employed in removing the snow the sum of thirty-three cents for each single wagon load, and for the purpose of making such payments, and as evidence of. the right of such persons to receive such payments, the said Bradley issued and delivered to each person so receiving a single cart load of snow a certain load ticket, so called, the same being-a written instrument bearing the name of the said Bradley and containing these words: Manhattan, one load of Snow. Deliver this Ticket to the Foreman at designated dumping place,”
A clerk in the employ of Bradley testified that he had a contract with the city to remove the snow from the streets; that a ticket man accompanied each loading gang of laborers, and when a cart load of snow was loaded on a cart the dockman would give to the driver of the truck one, two or three tickets, according to the capacity of the truck and the size of the load; that when a truck was thus loaded the driver received this ticket or tickets, went to the dump designated for that particular gang and dumped his load of snow and in return for the tickets that he had recéived when the snow was loaded he received from the dockman the number of pay tickets that he was entitled to; that on the twenty-seventh day of January there was a ticket man in the employ of Bradley by the name of Bendt; that the witness on the 27th day of January,'1905, delivered to Bendt about six o’clock in the evening 2,000 load tickets divided into pads of 500 tickets each. Two of the pads were then produced and the witness testified that they were two of the pads delivered by the witness to Bendt; that about nine o’clock on the same evening'Bendt returned very drunk and Upon an examination of his tickets it was found that nine pads of tickets of 100 each wei’e missing. The witness then testified that each of these tickets repre-v sented thirty-three cents. Bendt testified tljat he was in the employ of Bradley as a ticket man; that he received these tickets from the former witness in Bradley’s office on Friday, January 27, 1905, and that he carried them in a canvas bag furnished to him by Bradley; that after he received the tickets he went to a saloon and had a drink, and after that as he left the saloon on the southwest corner of Twenty-fourth street and Third avenue some one struck him in
The,only point insisted on by the defendant is that these tickets . were of no value and were not-the subject of larceny. I think it clear that .the person stealing them from Bendt was guilty of larceny under section 528 of the Penal Code. Section 536 of said Code provides that ■“ all the provisions of this chapter
It follows that the evidence satisfactorily shows that these instruments were within section 545 of the Penal Code; that the defendant was clearly guilty of receiving them, knowing them to have been stolen, and that the judgment was right and is affirmed.
O’Brien, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarke and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.
Penal Code, tit. 15, chap. 4.— [Rep.