153 N.Y.S. 981 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The defendant was indicted and convicted in the Court of General Sessions for the crime of criminally receiving stolen property, knowing the same to have been stolen. The subject of the larceny was an automobile, the property of one Charles S. Tebbutt, which was stolen on October 10, 1913, and which was found in defendant’s possession early in March, 1914. A great part of the rather long record presented to us is taken up with the question whether the car found in defendant’s possession was one he had purchased from a man named Sinclair in November, 1913, or the one which had been stolen from Tebbutt. The evidence was sufficient to sustain the finding of the jury that it was the stolen car. Where the People’s case failed, however, as we consider, was in establishing the guilty knowledge of the defendant, at the time he received the