In two indictments containing a total of 180 counts, the defendant was charged with larceny from his corporate employer, and in two other indictments containing 128 counts, he was charged with making false entries in his corporate employer’s books with intent to defraud. Each count alleges a separate incident of larceny or false entry. In sum, the larceny *772 indictments allege that the defendant stole over $4,000,000 from his employer during a period of approximately five years. The Commonwealth asserts that this was accomplished by the defendant’s drawing company checks payable to himself in amounts ranging from $2,083.27 to $60,811.75. The false entry indictments allege that, during the same period, the defendant made 128 false entries in the company’s books.
The defendant moved for a dismissal of the indictments on the ground that the offenses charged by the larceny indictments constituted only one crime of continuing larceny, and the offenses charged in the other indictments constituted only one continuing crime of false entry. Agreeing with the defendant, and having the defendant’s consent, the judge issued an order not dismissing the indictments “in full,” but granting the Commonwealth leave to amend the indictments to charge only one crime of larceny and one crime of false entry. The Commonwealth appealed, and we took the case on our own initiative. We treat the indictments as effectively having been dismissed. The defendant makes no contention that the case is not properly before us for appellate review. We reverse the decision of the motion judge.
Larceny is the taking without right of the personal property of another with the specific intent to deprive the other of the property permanently.
Commonwealth
v.
Johnson,
In
Commonwealth
v.
Stasiun, supra,
on which the present defendant relies, the defendants were convicted under an indictment charging them with soliciting a bribe (former G. L. c. 268, § 8).
Id.
at 43 & n.2. They contended on appeal that the indictment did not charge “a crime known to the law for the reason that it charg[ed] solicitation as a continuing offense,” that is, as a general practice (such as practicing medicine unlawfully).
Id.
at 44. We rejected that argument, concluding that each of several requests for an unlawful gratuity “was an integral part of the wrongful criminal solicitation, from one person, of one payment for one favor.”
Id.
at 44. We observed that it had been held elsewhere that “where it appears that successive takings are actuated by a single, continuing criminal impulse or intent or are pursuant to the execution of a general larcenous scheme, such successive takings constitute a single larceny, regardless of the extent of the time which may have elapsed between each taking” (citations omitted).
Id.
at 45. The defendant’s reliance on
Commonwealth
v.
Stasiun,
and on the language we have quoted, is misplaced. It does not follow from the fact that several separate requests for payment
may
be considered as one criminal solicitation of a bribe, that they
must
be so considered. The court in
Stasiun
made that clear by its observation that “[i]t is inconsequential that separate
*774
solicitations could, as is well established, be charged as separate offenses.
Commonwealth
v.
Mannos,
Commonwealth
v.
England,
The question before us is one of legislative intent.
Commonwealth
v.
Donovan,
In Commonwealth v. Donovan, supra, we held that, in the circumstances of that case, the Commonwealth could charge the defendant with only one crime of larceny. But that case is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar because there, unlike here, the defendant committed only one act. InDonovan, the defendants placed a phony night deposit box on the wall of a bank for one night and stole the deposits that were placed in the box by unsuspecting depositors. There was but one incident in Donovan, not 180 separate checks converted to money on 180 separate occasions, or 128 separate book entries.
The motion judge’s decision is reversed. The case is remanded for further proceedings.
So ordered.
