155 A. 701 | N.H. | 1931
At about nine o'clock on the evening of September 27, 1930, the respondents, who were traveling in an automobile, stopped at Grosset's filling-station on the Lyme road near Hanover ostensibly to purchase oil for their car. Two of them alighted, and while Grosset was waiting upon them one of the two struck him over the head with a club.
Grosset resisted the attack and succeeded in knocking the club from his assailant's hand. The two respondents then retreated to the *208 automobile and drove away, but not before Grosset had noted the number of the car and set the figures down on a piece of cardboard. This cardboard he left in the office of the filling-station and went to neighbor's house for assistance. An officer was summoned from Hanover, and on his arrival the cardboard was turned over to him. Grosset himself was too severely injured to return to the filling-station.
Police officials in surrounding towns were then notified, and through their efforts the defendants were apprehended. The registration number of their car corresponded to that on the cardboard. In the car the officers found a loaded revolver, a sawed-off shotgun and cartridges. An employee of a garage at Orford, eighteen miles north of Hanover, testified that the respondents stopped there for gasoline at half past nine that evening, saying that they could not pay for it and leaving a wrist watch as security.
The foregoing facts were in evidence when the state rested. The defendants themselves took the stand and denied being at Grosset's filling-station at all. They had been working for a road construction company in Bethlehem and were going back there for their pay checks. They had traveled from Worcester, Massachusetts, that day, and were without money. Gagliastre, who was seventeen years of age, admitted on cross-examination that he had several times been convicted of breaking and entering and larceny, and that he had but recently escaped from the industrial school in Massachusetts. Allastre, nineteen years old, testified that he also had been convicted in Massachusetts of breaking and entering, and that he had been sentenced for the offense and paroled the preceding December.
The presiding justice properly limited the use which could be made of these admissions (State v. Travis,
At the close of the state's evidence the defendants moved for a directed verdict solely on the ground that there was no evidence from which the jury could find an intent to rob.
Robbery is the felonious taking of property from the person of another by force. State v. Gorham,
It is elementary that intention may be shown by circumstances; and since this is so, further elaboration of the evidence will appear to be superfluous, for it is difficult to imagine facts from which an intent to rob is more logically inferable.
In this view of the case it is unnecessary to consider the state's contention that the defendants waived their motion by failing to renew it at the close of all the evidence.
The registration number of the defendants' car was 108,722. The cardboard remained in the possession of the police from the evening of the assault until the trial. Grosset, who was taken to the hospital that night, did not profess to remember the number, and while the foundation for the introduction of the exhibit was somewhat cursory and informal, the only reasonable inference to be drawn from Grosset's testimony is that he had no memory about the number which could be revived, but that the memorandum truly stated what he saw at the time it was made. Under such circumstances it was clearly admissible. Graves v. Railroad,
The morning after the assault a club was found at the filling-station near the spot where Grosset had been attacked. Grosset testified that he was accustomed to keep his yard free from rubbish and that this club was not there when he made his usual inspection just before the respondents arrived. The rule that the conduct of an assaulted person prior to the commission of the offense cannot be shown has no application. The authorities on which the defendants rely are cases holding that, unless self-defence is pleaded, a defendant cannot ordinarily show such conduct in justification of his assault. The defendants' contention that the state failed to prove that the club was ever in their possession "disregards the distinction between conjecture and reasonable deduction." Saad v. Papageorge,
The defendants' possession of the revolver, the sawed-off shotgun, and the cartridges was "so inconsistent with innocence and so consistent with" the intent charged "as to be plainly relevant." State v. Colcord,
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.