192 Wis. 452 | Wis. | 1927
The following opinion was filed January 11, 1927:
All the elements of the offense of breaking and entering a railway car in the nighttime, as defined by sec. 343.11 of the Statutes, are established by the testirrtony of a detective who was in the express car at the time the offense was alleged to have been committed. His testimony finds corroboration in the undisputed proof that the package, which he testifies was broken open in the car by defendant Strabel, was broken open after it was placed in the car and before the car arrived at the Milwaukee depot. Defendant Strabel and the detective were the only persons in the car during this time. Defendant Strabel admits that the car door was open and that he was at the open doorway of the car at the time of his arrest. He, however, denies that he broke the seal upon the car or that he entered the car before
But one of two conclusions can be drawn from the evidence. Either the defendant was guilty of the, offense charged, or the employees of the express company deliberately manufactured the case which was presented against defendant Strabel. When the testimony of the employees of the express company, including that of the one who was riding in the car, is viewed in the light of the undisputed proof of the surrounding circumstances, it is the solemn judgment of the court that the evidence not only supports the verdict of the jury, but that it leads to the conclusion that defendant Strabel was guilty of the offense charged. When viewed in the light of all the surrounding circumstances it cannot be said that the testimony of the employees of the express company is either incredible or unworthy of belief. There is nothing in the proof that warrants the conclusion that the employees of the company deliberately manufactured the case which was made against defendant Strabel.
2. The trial court properly refused to instruct that the jury should scrutinize the testimony of private detectives with care and caution. A court should not select any single class of witnesses and tell the jury that their testimony alone is to be viewed with care and caution. Had the court instructed the jury to view the testimony of any other class of witnesses or of the defendant with care and caution, it might have been the duty of the court to have given this instruction. But the form of such cautionary instructions must be left largely to the discretion of the trial court. The trial court discharged its duty by giving cautionary instructions that applied to all witnesses and not to any particular class of wit
3. There was no error in the rulings of the court upon evidence. The court promptly struck out the answer that no seals were found broken on express cars since the time of the defendant’s arrest. The court properly refused to permit appellant’s counsel to comment to the jury at the close of the argument upon statements made by the district attorney in his closing argument, to which appellant had made no objection at the time the argument was made. If the defendant desired to object to the argument of the district attorney he should have done so and made a record at the time that the matter to which objection was made was presented to the jury.
4. Affidavits presented in support of a motion for a new trial bore chiefly on. the question of whether the car which it is alleged was broken and entered was at the rear or in the middle of the string of three cars that were being moved at the time that the burglary was alleged to have been committed. That issue was presented by the proof received during the trial. The proof outlined in the affidavits was merely cumulative upon this issue. The motion for a new trial was properly denied.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
The defendant moved for a rehearing.
In support of the motion there was a brief by Henry Ma- . honey, attorney, and Irving A. Fish, of counsel, both of Milwaukee.
The motion was denied, without costs, on April 5, 1927.