Court Opinion

ID: 3498874
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:06:13.614712+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:15:51.836298
License: Public Domain

The prosecuting attorney confesses error. In this he does well, for the error is patent. Defendant should have been discharged at the trial. Defendant was tried under an information charging him with larceny of an automobile, and with receiving the same automobile, knowing it had been stolen. He was acquitted of larceny and convicted of receiving stolen property.
The automobile was stolen April 6, 1925, in the city of Detroit, and was found in defendant's possession at Columbus, Ohio, on the 11th day of May, with numbers changed, except secret numbers of the manufacturer. Defendant was arrested in Ohio and brought to Detroit for trial. There was no evidence that defendant was in Detroit at or about the time of the larceny. Defendant was a witness and testified he bought the automobile in Ohio, gave the name of the man from whom he purchased, and produced written evidence of the sale to him. Outside of showing a larceny and the finding of the stolen automobile in defendant's possession in the State of Ohio, over a month after the larceny, with numbers changed, the people offered no evidence. There was no showing, by direct or circumstantial evidence, that defendant received the property within the jurisdiction of the recorder's court. If the jury did not believe the testimony given by defendant this was of no help to the prosecution. It is elementary, and the statute so provides, that one receiving stolen property, to be guilty of a crime, must have knowledge that it was stolen. This knowledge may be shown either by *Page 505 
direct evidence or by facts reasonably imputing knowledge, but cannot rest upon mere suppositions.
We need not repeat what was said by this court inDurant v. People, 13 Mich. 351; People v. Mullis, 200 Mich. 505;  People v. Tantenella, 212 Mich. 614.
The jury having acquitted defendant of larceny, and the automobile having been found in the State of Ohio; there being no evidence, except possession by defendant in Ohio, and no evidence from which the jury could find that the automobile was received by defendant in the city of Detroit, the defendant should have been discharged for want of evidence showing the commission of the crime of receiving stolen property within the jurisdiction of the court, or anywhere else. We find no occasion to discuss other errors alleged.
The conviction is set aside, judgment reversed and defendant discharged.
BIRD, C.J., and SHARPE, SNOW, STEERE, FELLOWS, CLARK, and McDONALD, JJ., concurred.