JOHN HYDE.
10th September 1783
Reference Numbert17830910-76
VerdictNot Guilty

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669. JOHN HYDE was indicted for feloniously stealing, on the 18th day of July last, one cloth coat, value 20 s. the property of Henry Readshaw .

HENRY READSHAW sworn.

I live in Russell-street , I am a Pawnbroker , on Friday the 18th of July, I lost a cloth coat, between two and three o'clock in the afternoon, it was hanging up in the shop for sale, I saw it there a little before: It was pledged the same day at another pawnbroker's; the prisoner had come to my shop several times in the course of the day, and I had a strong suspicion of him, and he came at night again and made an attempt on the window, and then I took him up upon suspicion, and the next day he owned before the magistrate he had stolen it; there is a confession in writing.

JOHN LANE sworn.

I live with Mr. Lane, a pawnbroker, in Holborn, the prisoner brought this coat to our shop the 18th of July, between three and five; I lent him half a guinea upon it, he said, he had just bought it, I did not know him, he pawned it in the name of John Hyde ; the prosecutor came the next day and claimed the coat before the magistrate.

PRISONER's DEFENCE.

I pawned the coat for half a guinea, on the 17th of July; I was coming down Drury-lane, and I met one of my shipmates, he asked me to drink some hot; we went and had three pots of brandy hot and a quartern of rum, he said, he was going to sea again, I said, I was out of work, I worked for Mr. Davis, in Park-lane; he pulled out an outside jacket and put it on; he desired me to pawn his coat, and he would give me a silk handkerchief, and when he went down to enter on board a man of war he would send me the money; I said, if he would sell it I would give him a guinea and a half; Lane knew me from a child, I told him it was my coat and that I had but just bought it, I bought a gilt breast buckle the day before, with five stones in it, of the prosecutor; I happened to stop to make a little water being very much intosticated, and the prosecutor said, I know you have stole my coat; the mots arose and asked me the matter, I told them the whole affair, that I had bought a coat which had been stolen, but that I did not know it; the prosecutor said he would send me to gaol, and the people said break his windows, I did take a handful of mud and bit the window, but did not break it; the people told me to go away, I said, I was innocent; I might have walked away and gone to sea, or to America, where I have been, and nobody would have followed me:

I did not think I should have been tried to day, or else I should have had witnesses and my Captain to appear to my character.

Court to Lane. Do you know the prisoner? - Mr. Lane himself does know him, and has seen him several times, I do not.

Jury. I understood the first evidence said, that the witness had confessed this before a magistrate.

Court. The confession has been searched for, having been reduced into writing, and it cannot be found, therefore you cannot take into your consideration any confession at all.

NOT GUILTY .

Tried by the first Middlesex Jury before Mr. Baron HOTHAM.


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