Defendant was convicted of stealing property of the value of more than $50 (Secs. 560.156; 560.161) and under the habitual criminal statutes and sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary. (556.280 and 556.290; all statutory references are to RSMo and V.A.M.S.) Defendant has appealed and assigns error in refusing his motion for directed verdict, in connection with which it is claimed that evidence was used which was obtained by illegal search and seizure.
Evidence was heard on a motion to suppress, which was overruled. The evidence on this issue was substantially the same as the testimony at the trial. The following facts were shown by the State’s evidence. On September 12, 1958, Detective Sergeant Dowd (not in uniform) was driving west on Ninth Street in Kansas City when a panel truck, owned by defendant and driven by M. J. Pettit, crowded his car over the curb at Ninth and Benton. He followed the truck to Ninth and Prospect, where it stopped at a filling station. When Pettit got out of the truck, Dowd got out of his car and asked Pettit “why he drove like that”; and, when.Pettit paid no attention to him, he told him he was under arrest. Dowd *28 checked Pettit’s driver’s license and then went over to the truck on the .driver’s side and saw defendant sitting in the center of the driver’s seat. The truck had windows on each side of the front at the driver’s seat and there was no partition behind the seat. Dowd could see in through the driver’s window and “saw a large propeller, which appeared to be a motor propeller, sticking out from under a rug, * * * back probably a foot and a half [behind the driver’s seat].” He stated he then had the following conversation with defendant: “I said, 'What do you have there under the rug?’ He said, ‘An old outboard motor.’ I said, ‘What are you going to do with it?’ He said, ‘Sell it.’ I said ‘How much do you want for it?’ He said, ‘$50.00.’ I said, ‘Do you mind if I look at it?’ He said, ‘No.’ ” Dowd went to the rear of the truck, opened the back doors and pulled the rug off the motor. Pie said: “I looked at it. It had a tag on it, a tag with directions, and appeared to be a brand new motor, maroon and white, 35 horsepower Elgin. He told me it was an old motor he was going to sell for $50.00, and it looked like it was worth about $400.00 or $500.00.” Defendant was then arrested and taken to the police station. Defendant said it was his truck and he would take full responsibility so Pettit was released.
E. N. Russell identified the motor by brand, size and serial number, as one he had bought about a week before for $475. He said that he had locked it in his station wagon, parked in front of his apartment, on the night of September 11, 1958, intending to take it on a week-end trip the next day. Pie saw it there at 8 :00 P.M. and the next morning at 6:15 A.M. it was gone. The window vent on tire right-hand front door of his car was broken and the door was unlocked. The motor was new and had never been used; Russell had taken it out of its crate that night to put it in his car.
Defendant testified that he was playing cards all night (September 11-12, 1958) with two men who so testified. Defendant said he got the motor from a man named Roy Williams, who wanted to sell it to him and who offered to give him a commission of $20 if he could sell it for $100. Defendant said he found a man who was interested, on the afternoon of September 12th, and wanted to see the motor. Defendant said he got the motor from Williams in an alley about a quarter of a block beyond Ninth and Prospect just a few minutes before he was arrested. Defendant said he asked Pettit to drive his truck because Pettit had a driver’s license and he did not. It was not explained what had become of Williams.
At the hearing on the motion to suppress, defendant and Pettit testified that Dowd found the motor by opening the back doors of the panel truck and removing the rug, which defendant claimed completely covered the entire motor including the propeller. However, Pettit did admit that “it is possible to see all throughout the truck standing outside looking in the window” at the driver’s seat; and Dowd’s testimony was that he saw the propellor of the motor, right behind the front seat, not covered by the rug, while standing by the driver’s seat. As we said of a similar situation in State v. Hawkins,
Defendant further contends there was no substantial evidence to connect him with the stealing of the motor. Defendant cites cases holding that mere constructive possession of property is insufficient (State v. Wyre, Mo.Sup.,
“In this state the law is well settled that while recent possession of Stolen property is not proof of guilt as a matter of law, it is sufficient to submit the case to the jury.” State v. Tomlinson,
Defendant also makes the following contentions concerning his conviction and sentence under the habitual criminal statutes, namely, that the verdict was insufficient because it failed to find that defendant had been convicted of a prior felony and discharged or pardoned therefrom prior to the commission of the crime for which he was tried; that the State did not prove defendant’s prior convictions with properly certified copies of the judgments; that the manner of presentation of evidence of his former convictions by including releases, paroles and revocations was improper; and that admission of evidence of these convictions prior to the time the guilt of defendant was determined by the jury was unfair and unconstitutional. The verdict after finding defendant guilty of stealing stated, “and we further find the defendant has been convicted of four prior felonies and assess his punishment at ten years in the State Penitentiary.” Defendant cites State v. Garrison, Mo.Sup.,
Defendant’s other contentions, concerning the method and manner of showing his prior convictions, are immaterial in view of defendant’s admissions concerning these convictions, especially since the documents in evidence did show that defendant had served the sentences imposed and been discharged. See State v. Dalton, supra, 23 S.W.2d loc. cit. 5. Furthermore, the only mention of these matters in defendant’s motion for new trial is as follows : “5. The presentation of the evidence under the Habitual Criminal Act and the manner in which it was presented was prejudicial, illegal, and unconstitutional.” This is not a statement of specific grounds “in detail and with particularity,” required by Rule 27.20, 42 V.A.M.S., and therefore preserves nothing for appellate review. Furthermore, it is well settled that evidence of prior convictions, when a defendant is charged under the habitual criminal statutes, is properly admissible at the trial and does
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not violate any constitutional rights of defendant. State v. Nolan, Mo.Sup.,
The judgment is affirmed.
