250 F. 566 | 2d Cir. | 1918
(after stating the facts as above).
Judgment affirmed on the first indictment; reversed on the second.
The Oxford Dictionary gives five different uses of the word, with many subdivisions in each. The first use is: “To strip of possessions by violences, to plunder, rob.” The second is: “To strip or deprive violently of, to rob.” A quotation from Dr. Johnson’s Letters is as follows: “You talk of despoiling his book of fine print.”
The third use was (3b): “To undress; to strip of armour, vestments, etc.,” but this is obsolete.
The fourth use, also obsolete, is: “To strip of worth, value or use; to render useless, mar, destroy.”
A quotation in 1539 reads: “An action of trespass against * * * Robert Oliver for despoyling my grass.”
Another, in 1685, was: “The besieged * * * again put in order the despoiled battery.”
The Century Dictionary gives three uses, of which the second is: “To deprive by spoliation; strip by force, plunder; bereave; with of; as' to despoil one of his goods or of honors.”
The third use is: “To strip; divest, undress: used absolutely or with of (obsolete or archaic).”