Mr. Hubert. Well, you mean that you can go through that door and then when it closes you—it is not locked unless you turn it?
Mr. Servance. Well, that’s right. See, we can trip it off, you have got a double lock, you understand. You know the doors got a night latch like—you know, but in order to lock that door it has got another lock in there that we turn.
Mr. Hubert. Let me put it to you this way: Suppose a man uses the key to get through the door from the outside of the building, now, the door closes shut automatically, doesn’t it?
Mr. Servance. Yes, sir.
Mr. Hubert. Does it lock so that you need the key to get back inside, or not?
Mr. Servance. No, sir.
Mr. Hubert. It does not lock?
Mr. Servance. It does not lock. In order to lock it from the alleyway side so that nobody can come in you have got to turn it. Put the key and turn.
Mr. Hubert. Otherwise the door is open?
Mr. Servance. That’s right, sir.