Kespondent was convicted of breaking and entering the store of one Joseph Wolf, not adjoining to or occupied with a dwelling-house. The information was filed under How. Stat. § 9134. The form of the information was the same as in People v. Nolan, 22 Mich. 229.
I find nothing in the record to distinguish this case from that o'f People v. Nolan, supra, except the testimony tending to show that two or three times the women had permitted Mr. Wolf to pass through their apartments to get some coal he kept in the rear; and also that he had permitted the women, when the weather, was wet, and during business hours, to pass through his store into their apartments, thus saving them a trip through the muddy alley in the rear, which was their customary way of ingress and egress. None of these privileges were granted in the lease given by Wolf to these women. Wolf did not sleep nor take his meals in the place, but boarded and lived in another part of the city. Respondent gave evidence tending to show more frequent passing from the store into this dwelling in the rear than the witnesses on behalf of the people had admitted.
The court left it to the jury to determine whether this
I find no error upon the record, and the conviction is affirmed.