Court Opinion

ID: 3491361
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:59:46.862503+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:05:06.730711
License: Public Domain

Defendant was convicted and sentenced for the crimes of breaking and entering a dwelling in the daytime, with intent to commit larceny therein, and of larceny from a dwelling, and prosecutes this appeal from such conviction.
It was claimed by the prosecution that he obtained certain articles of personal property, including a fur coat, from the dwelling in question, later disposing of them at a pawn shop in the city of Detroit.
One of the witnesses, a clerk in the pawn shop, testified that the pawn ticket, exhibit 3, was signed by defendant in his presence and that defendant signed the name "Ed Barrows" thereto. Thereafter, Francis B. Courtney, a handwriting expert, was permitted to testify that the handwriting on certain documents, exhibit 6, found in a brief case in defendant's possession at the time of his arrest, was, in his opinion, written by the same person who wrote the signature "Ed Barrows" on exhibit 3. *Page 351 
Defendant claims that it was error to permit the witness so to testify without first requiring proof that the handwriting on exhibit 6 was that of the defendant. Although the testimony is somewhat confusing, it appears certain that the point at issue was whether the same person who wrote exhibit 6 signed the pawn ticket, exhibit 3. If so, this would tend to implicate defendant who had been identified as the person who signed "Ed Barrows" to the pawn ticket.
It was not necessary to prove that exhibit 6 was in the handwriting of defendant before it could be properly compared with the signature on exhibit 3. The signature on the latter exhibit had been positively established as the handwriting of defendant although he had assumed another name in signing the ticket. This exhibit, in evidence, could then be used as a basis for comparison to determine if exhibit 6 was in the same handwriting, and it was not error to permit the expert so to express an opinion. Vinton v. Peck, 14 Mich. 287; First Nat'lBank of Houghton v. Robert, 41 Mich. 709. See, also, People v.Parker, 67 Mich. 222 (11 Am. St. Rep. 578); People v.Hutchings, 137 Mich. 527.
It is claimed that the court erred in giving the following instruction to the jury.
"I received certain exhibits in evidence which were found in the car after the defendant's arrest, including a brief case in which there was some handwriting. I didn't receive the handwriting as positive proof of the defendant's handwriting. That is a matter of fact for you to decide if that was his handwriting."
Defendant contends that it was for the court, not the jury, to determine if exhibit 6 was in defendant's handwriting. The fallacy of the argument lies in the fact that exhibit 6 was being compared with *Page 352 
exhibit 3, the established handwriting of defendant. It was for the jury to determine the weight to be given the opinion testimony of the expert that exhibit 6 was written by the same person who wrote exhibit 3. Vinton v. Peck, supra; People v.Gale, 50 Mich. 237; People v. Parker, supra; Domzalski v.Jozefiak, 257 Mich. 273.
Error is also claimed because the prosecutor was permitted, over objection, to read from the statutes provisions relative to the proper manner by which people might change their names. While we are of the opinion that this was improper, an examination of the record is convincing that defendant was not prejudiced thereby and thus no error resulted.
The conviction is affirmed.
SHARPE, C.J., and BUSHNELL, NORTH, McALLISTER, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred with CHANDLER, J.