Defendants Bolton and Wells appeal from conviction of second degree burglary. Robert Smith who was convicted with them did not appeal.
The principal point raised by both appellants is insufficiency of the evidence and we must be guided by the rule set forth in
People
v.
Daugherty,
The charge is burglary of the office and building occupied by Los Angeles Schools Equipment Company, located in Gardena, county of Los Angeles. Robert Ellis and his brother were working in the yard back of the shop; he noticed two colored boys near the large open front door of the building; asked “may we help you,” one of them made a negative motion and both walked away. Neither one was carrying anything. They were at such a distance that Robert Ellis testified he could not identify them and his brother did not testify. This was about 2:30 to 2:45 in the afternoon of August 26th, 1959. Within a few minutes, not over 15, Robert went into the office and noticed that an adding machine, typewriter and portable sander were missing from the office. They were returned by *328 the police about a week later and were adequately identified at the trial.
About 5 or 10 minutes after 3 of that same afternoon, State Traffic Officer Kreipl stopped a car which had made an improper turn at the intersection of Alameda and Ord Streets, 3% to 4 miles from the Schools Equipment Company plant. Defendant Wells was driving, Smith in the right front seat and Bolton in the right rear. 1 The car belonged to Bolton’s brother. The officer asked for Wells’ driver’s license and that he get out of the ear so a cheek of the brakes could be made. Wells complied and the brakes when tested proved defective. The officer saw on the floor in the rear some articles covered by a white Navy blanket with the handle of what proved to be a sander exposed to view and bearing the word “Skill” on it. He asked Wells to go to the police ear with him, about 20 feet to the rear, while he wrote a ticket for traffic violation and faulty brakes. As he passed the Bolton ear at that time he saw that the handle marked “Skill” was also covered by the blanket. Suspicious, he telephoned the Compton Police about a possible burglary and asked them to send someone to him. At 3:15 Officer Baguley of the Compton Police arrived and he and Kreipl went to the Bolton car. Bolton and Smith had disappeared. The officers lifted the blanket and there lay the adding machine, typewriter and sander which had been taken from the Schools Equipment Company plant; also an electric screw driver which did not belong to that company. Wells was not given a traffic citation but was arrested upon the burglary charge.
Clearly there had been a burglary and in less than an hour the three defendants were found in possession of the stolen property. This fact constitutes some evidence that they were the burglars but would not be sufficient, standing alone, to sustain a conviction of burglary. “Possession alone of property stolen in a burglary is not of itself sufficient to sustain the possessor’s conviction of that burglary. There must be corroborating evidence of acts, conduct, or declarations of the accused tending to show his guilt. [Citations.] When possession is shown, however, the corroborating evidence may be slight [citations], and the failure to show that possession was honestly obtained is itself a strong circumstance tending to show the possessor’s guilt of the burglary. [Citations.] ”
*329
{People
v.
Citrino,
So far as Bolton is concerned his possession of the stolen property, plus his flight in the face of impending investigation, made a case against him.
People
v.
Scott,
The situation of Wells is not quite so simple.
Obviously the three defendants were acting in concert with each other in transporting the stolen property with an ultimate objective of disposing of it in some manner. That constitutes conspiracy. In criminal cases it is not necessary to plead the conspiracy as a basis for imputing the act of one
*330
conspirator to all of them
(People
v.
Williams,
Fricke on Criminal Law (7th ed.), pages 123-124: “It does not follow that, when the declared object of a conspiracy has been accomplished, the conspiracy is at an end and that there is no further liability to any of the conspirators because of an act of one of its members. In a conspiracy to commit a crime the conspiracy continues not only until that crime has been committed but until the ultimate object of the crime has been accomplished and the liability of the conspirators, as such, extends beyond the mere consummation of the crime.
(People
v.
Tinnin,
“While it may not be expressly so agreed, it is obviously tacitly understood by the persons who conspire to commit a criminal offense, and the law is justified in assuming, that
*331
the conspiracy includes the evading and resisting of arrest and acts done to that end
(People
v.
Welch,
“The common design of the conspiracy ‘may extend in point of time beyond the actual commission of the act constituting the crime for which the accused is being tried, such as for the purpose of concealing the crime, securing the proceeds thereof, or bribing or influencing witnesses. . . . Of course it must reasonably appear that such acts were committed in furtherance of the common design of the conspiracy. . . .’
(People
v.
Suter,
Under these circumstances flight of Bolton and Smith, two of the conspirators, becomes part of the res gestae and admissible against Wells. Indeed it was proved without objection from him. It is a fair inference that the guilty knowledge which impelled Bolton and Smith to flight was shared by defendant Wells who, in the immediate presence of the officers, had no chance to flee.
An additional rule here applicable is that “a defendant who was in possession of stolen property has a duty to explain his possession in order to remove the effect of possession as a circumstance, taken with other suspicious facts, of guilt. [Citations.]”
(People
v.
Kefry, supra,
Finally, defendant did not elect to testify. While his testimonial silence did not close any hiatus in the proof, it did emphasize the unfavorable inference flowing from the evidence above reviewed.
(People
v.
Adamson,
Appropriate, by way of conclusion to the discussion of this question of sufficiency of the evidence, is the following: “In a case such as this, all the circumstances must be considered together in determining whether the inference of guilt may be found.
(People
v.
Goodall,
Appellant Wells argues that there was prejudicial misconduct on the part of the deputy district attorney in his argument concerning defendant’s failure to testify. He re-' fers to a portion of the following excerpt from the transcript: “Mb. Fukuto : The Court will instruct you that a person in possession, I believe, of stolen property will have a reasonable opportunity to show his possession of these goods, his intent, and if he fails to do so that is also a circumstance tending to prove his guilt. . . . Not one of those three defendants came to the stand yesterday and told you how they in fact came into possession of these items. There is no question they were stolen from this particular shop. Not one of *333 them came on the stand and explained to you. They had reasonable opportunity. They had your attention, your captive audience in this particular ease. They had the opportunity and they failed to explain how they came into legitimate possession of these particular goods. I ask you to follow that particular instruction, that that also is a circumstance that tends to show the defendants’ guilt.” The instruction given by the court is CALJIC 203, which is set forth in the margin. 2 Counsel for Wells protested that the deputy district attorney was misstating the law but he made no assignment of misconduct and no request that the jury be instructed to disregard the objectionable statements. Any harmful effect of the argument could have been removed by an appropriate instruction if requested. Hence appellant is not now in position to urge the error, if one there be. (Fricke on Criminal Procedure [5th ed.], p. 463.) We are not implying, however, that there was any misconduct; we simply do not decide the point.
Appellant Bolton argues that the court failed to give “a clear, understandable, and descriptive, definition of Burglary of the 2d Degree as defined by law, which a Jury of laymen could have understood. ’ ’ The instruction given is set forth in the margin. 3 There is no merit in this contention.
*334 The instruction is a paraphrase of section 460, Penal Code, and is clear and comprehensive.
Bolton also claims an unlawful search and seizure of the stolen articles taken from his ear. No objection to the receipt of this evidence was made in the trial court and it is too late to advance the point here.
(People
v.
Farrara,
Defendants Bolton and Wells each appeal from the judgment and order denying his motion for new trial. The judgment is affirmed as to each appealing defendant and both orders denying new trial are affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 3, 1961, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 10, 1961. Traynor, J., Peters, J., and Dooling, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
While the testimony does not disclose that defendants were colored men, it does appear that they were under observation of the jury at the trial and we are entitled to assume in aid of the verdict that the jurors saw them to be three colored men.
The mere possession of stolen property, however soon after the taking, unexplained by the person having possession, is not sufficient to justify conviction. It is, however, a circumstance to be considered in connection with other evidence in determining the question of innocence or guilt. If you should find from the evidence that a burglary was committed on the premises involved in this case and that thereafter the defendant was found in possession, or claimed to be the owner, of property stolen from the burglarized premises, such a fact would be a circumstance tending in some degree to show guilt, although not sufficient, standing alone and unsupported by other evidence, to warrant your finding him guilty. In addition to proof of possession of such property there must be proof of corroborating circumstances tending of themselves to establish guilt. Such corroborating circumstances may consist of the acts, conduct, falsehoods, if any, or other declarations, if any, of the defendant, and any other proved circumstance tending to show the guilt of the accused.
‘ 1 One who is found in the possession of property that was stolen from burglarized premises is bound to explain such possession in order to remove the effect of that fact as a circumstance, to be considered with all other evidence, pointing to his guilt; and if he gives a false account of how he acquired that possession or, having reasonable opportunity to show that his possession was honestly acquired, he refuses or fails to do so, such conduct is a circumstance that tends to show his guilt. ’ ’
‘ There are two degrees of burglary. Every burglary of an inhabited building committed in the nighttime, that is, between sunset and sunrise, and every burglary, whether in the daytime or nighttime, committed by a person armed with a deadly weapon, or who, while in the commission *334 of such burglary, arms himself with a deadly weapon, or who, while in the commission of such burglary, assaults any person, is burglary of the first degree. All other kinds of burglary are of the second degree.
“If you should find the defendant guilty of burglary, it will be your duty to determine the degree thereof and to state that degree in your verdict. ’ ’
