
    The People of the State of New York, Respondent, v. Michael Zimmer, Appellant.
    Second Department,
    July 28, 1916.
    Crime — receiving stolen property — indictment — crime must have been committed in county alleged.
    A count for grand larceny, second degree, may be joined in an indictment with a count of criminally receiving stolen property.
    Where an indictment charges that the crime of receiving stolen property was committed in Kings county, no conviction can be had where the proof shows that the sale of the stolen property was consummated and that it was actually delivered in the county of New York.
    Under the statutes of this State the crime of knowingly receiving stolen property is a complete substantive offense not related to the original larceny.
    ' Appeal by the defendant, Michael Zimmer, from a judgment of the Supreme Court of Kings county, rendered against him on the 21st day of January, 1916, convicting him of the crime of criminally receiving stolen property.
    
      Otho S. Bowling [Robert H. Elder with him on the brief], for the appellant.
    
      Harry O. Anderson, Assistant District Attorney [Harry E. Lewis, District Attorney, and Hersey Egginton, Assistant District Attorney, with him on the brief], for the respondent.
   Putnam, J.:

The indictment had two counts: (1) Grand larceny, second degree, in that, on August 2, 1913, he stole a horse valued at $200 from William Lynch; (2) criminally receiving stolen property, in that, on August 2, 1913, in the county of Kings, defendant received a horse of the value of $200, the property of William Lynch, which had been stolen, as defendant knew. The joinder of these two counts was proper. (People v. Wilson, 151 N. Y. 403, 408.)

The jury found defendant guilty under the second count, virtually an acquittal under the first count for larceny.

The verdict having acquitted defendant of grand larceny, our review must be limited to the evidence tending to show the crime of receiving stolen property.

The jury must have reasoned that one Schwartzburg stole the horse, which he then sold to defendant, who, at the time of his purchase, knew the horse had been stolen.

The indictment charges that the crime was committed in Kings county. The evidence shows that the sale was consummated in a saloon in New York county,- and that the horse was delivered by Schwartzburg to defendant at the same time.

Earlier, the Revised Statutes (Pt. 4, chap. 2, tit. 4, art. 2, § 43; 2 R. S. 726, 727, § 43) provided that “In the cases where any person shall be liable to prosecution as the receiver of any personal property that shall have been feloniously stolen, taken or embezzled, he may be indicted, tried and convicted in any county where he received or had such property, notwithstanding such theft was committed in another county.” Except by adding the words “or had such property,” which extended the jurisdiction to places where the goods might be carried by the receiver (Wills v. People, 3 Park. Cr. Rep. 473), this was but declaratory of the common law. If it were still in force, it would not aid this prosecution, as it gave no jurisdiction to indict and try in the place of original larceny, to which defendant was not an accomplice.

When the metropolitan police district was formed by bringing together the counties of New York, Kings, Westchester and Richmond (Laws of 1857, chap. 569), an act was passed which assimilated these four counties, so that a receiver of stolen goods could be indicted, tried and convicted in the county of the taking, notwithstanding such property had been bought or received in any other county in said district. (Laws of 1869, chap. 278, § 1.) This, however, has been repealed. (Laws of 1881, chap. 537, § 1; Laws of 1886, chap. 593, § 1, subd. 44; Laws of 1909, chap. 66, § 6.)

While to constitute the offense of receiving stolen goods, some one must have first committed larceny, such larceny is not strictly an element of defendant’s crime, but only a prerequisite which must be connected with the receiver by scienter, or by good ground to believe that the property had been stolen.

At common law, the receiving of stolen goods was a misdemeanor, and it was a substantive offense. By statute 3 and 4 William, and Mary (Chap. 9, § 4), and 5 Anne (Chap. 31, § 5 et seq.), the offender was made an accessory to the theft and punishable as such. The common-law remedy was not taken away, as the prosecutor could punish the receiver for the misdemeanor, or, after conviction of the thief, could prosecute the receiver as an accessory. (4 Bl. Com. 38, 132.)

An early New York statute provided for punishing the receivers of stolen goods feloniously taken away or stolen “whether the principal be convicted or not.” (R. L. of 1813, chap. 29, § 13, passed March 19, 1813; 1 R. L. 410, § 13.)

The learned district attorney refers us to the former English Larceny Act (7 & 8 Geo. IV, chap. 29, § 56 [1827]), which provided that a receiver “ whether charged as an accessory after the fact to the felony, or with a substantive felony, or with a misdemeanor only, may be dealt with, indicted, tried, and punished in any county or place in which he shall have or shall have had any such property in his possession, or in any county or place in which the party guilty of the principal felony or misdemeanor may by law be tried, in the same manner as such receiver may be dealt with, indicted, tried, and punished in the county or place where he actually received such property. ” (Chitty Crim. Law [Huntington’s ed.], Appendix, p. lxiii. See, also, 24 & 25 Vict. chap. 96, § 96 [1861].) But such an extension of the jurisdiction has not obtained in this State.

Our Penal Law (§ 1308), like the earlier statutes, treats receiving stolen goods as a substantive offense. Jurisdiction to indict and try must be local, like other offenses. . It is not outside the county, unless in exceptional instances, as within 500 yards of the county boundary line (Code Crim. Proc. § 135), or upon a railway train (Id. § 137). And the offense is committed where the goods were received, and not elsewhere. (12 Cyc. 234; Clark & Marshall on Crimes [2d ed.], 763, 764.)

The learned district attorney relies, however, oh section 134 of the Code of Criminal Procedure providing for jurisdiction in either county where a crime is committed in part in different counties or “the acts or effects * * * occur in two or more counties.”

This familiar criminal legislation does not apply to receiving stolen goods in States, as in New York, where receipt of stolen goods is made a complete substantive offense. It was committed where the horse was knowingly bought. No act or consummation was in Kings county. (Allison v. Commonwealth, 83 Ky. 254; State v. Pray, 30 Nev. 206; People v. Stakem, 40 Cal. 599; State v. Rider, 46 Kan. 332; Roach v. State, 5 Cold. [Tenn.], 39. See Commonwealth v. O’Neill, 10 Penn. Dist. 227.)

Clearly, therefore, defendant was improperly convicted in Kings county.

It is argued that the jury might indulge in a presuniption, from defendant’s recent possession of the horse, that he had criminally received the horse here in Kings county. After the testimony in the case, followed by acquittal of appellant for larceny, no basis whatever remained for such a presumption, in disregard of the uncontradicted proofs of purchase and sale in New York county.

The judgment of conviction should, therefore, be reversed and appellant discharged.

Thomas, Carr and Rich, JJ., concurred; Jerks, P. J., not voting.

Judgment of conviction reversed and appellant discharged.  