33 A.D. 177 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
It appeared that the defendant had been previously indicted and convicted, upon his plea of guilty, of burglary in the third degree and sentenced to one year in the penitentiary, from which he had been released December 30, 1897.
The police officer who made the arrest testified that on December 30, 1897, at about .two o’clock in the afternoon, he saw the defendant, in company with another man, on the east side of Amsterdam avenue, in the middle of .the block, between Seventy-third and Seventy-fourth streets, “ looking at the houses.” The
Two witnesses for the People testified that the iron instrument • referred to, commonly called a “ jimmy,” is of the kind used by burglars in forcing doors leading into dwellings.
The defendant took the stand -in his own behalf, giving the name 'of Maurice Loeha, which he said was his right name, but that he ■ lad changed it to Edward Thompson when he was arrested before, and that in the station house, When arrested upon the present charge,
■ The jury brought in a verdict of guilty. The defendant claims that the evidence was insufficient; that the court erred in certain rulings excluding evidence, and that, assuming the charge as proved, that the defendant, an ex-convict, was arrested with burglars’ tools in his possession, the circumstances did not evince a present intention, as the statute requires, of committing a crime.
The first question' is presented by a motion made at the close of the People’s case, and renewed at the close of the entire case, that the court advise the jury to acquit the'defendant on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to warrant a conviction. To dispose intelligently of this, as of the other questions involved, a reference to the section of the Penal Code upon the subject is necessary. It is provided, among other things,, in section 508 of the Penal Code, that “ a person who makes or mends, or causes to be made or mended, or has in his possession in the day or nighttime, any engine, machine, tool, false key, picklock, bit, nippers or implements adapted, designed or commonly used for the commission of burglary, larceny or other crime, under circumstances evincing an intent to xxse or employ, or allow the same to be used or employed, in the commission of a crime, or knowing that the same are intended to be so used, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, if he has been previously convicted of any crime, he is guilty of a felony.”
It is not disputed but that the question whether the prisoner had or had not in his possession a “ jimmy,” concededly a tool or implement commonly used for the commission of burglary, was, upon the..
With regard to rulings upon evidence, we do not think that any error was committed. The question asked by the defendant’s counsel of the prisoner, whether or not, the next day in the police court, the officer did not make a charge against his companion, if answered^ might have been harmless; blit certainly it was not error to exclude it, because it was entirely immaterial. ’ So, also, with respect to the ruling which excluded a question directed to showing the defend-, ant’s efforts to reform.
Starting, therefore, with the fact that it was conceded that the defendant had been previously convicted of burglary in the third degree, and the jury having found that he was in possession of a jimmy with intent to commit a- crime, upon evidence which justified the court in submitting those questions to the jury, which was done in a full and fair charge, to which no exception was taken, we think that the judgment of conviction entered thereon "should be affirmed.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.