116 Ga. 578 | Ga. | 1902
The plaintiff in error was tried, on an accusation in the city court of Sandersville, for the offense of larceny from the person. The accusation charges that he wrongfully and fraudulently took a certain pistol from the person of the prosecutor, Copeland, privately and without his knowledge, with intent to steal the same. He was convicted, and made a motion for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was contrary to law and the evidence, and without law or evidence to support it. The motion being overruled, he excepted. The contention of counsel for the plaintiff in error is that the evidence fails to show that the accused took the pistol with intent to steal the same, and that therefore the verdict is contrary to law and the evidence. Larceny from the person is defined by our Penal Code,§ 175,to be “wrongful and fraudulent taking of money, goods, or any article of value, from the person of another, privately, without his knowledge, in any place whatever, with intent to steal the same.” It will be noted that this definition varies from that of simple larceny (Penal Code, § 155) in that in larceny from the person the taking must be privately and without his knowledge. In the case of Moye v. State, 65 Ga. 754, this court ruled that the crime could not be completed if the owner of the property had knowledge that it was being taken. Again, no grade or character of larceny is complete unless, accompanying the taking, there is an intent to steal. It is true that as a general proposition the intent may be manifested by the circumstances, but these circumstances must always be sufficient to indicate that the intention to steal existed. This court, in the case of Patterson v. State, 85 Ga. 134, quoted approvingly from a Michigan case a statement that the “ general rule is well settled, to which there are few, if any, exceptions, that when a statute makes an offense to consist of an act combined with a particular intent, that intent is just as necessary to be proved as the act itself, and must be found by the jury, as a matter of fact, before a conviction can be had.” Mr. Wharton in the first volume of his Criminal Law, § 885, on authority, states the general rule to be that “ taking goods, not with the intention of depriving the owner of his property in them, but with the object of temporarily using them and then returning them, is not larceny;” and (§886) that “the mere borrowing without fraudulent intent is not larceny.” Mr. Bishop in the second volume of his New Criminal Law, § 840 (5), after citing quite a num
The evidence of the prosecutor, who was the only witness for the State, is to the following effect: Between the hours of sunset and dark, at a public place — Buffalo Bridge — in Washington county, he was lying down and saw the accused walking towards the place where he was; be had his back to him and had a pistol in the back pocket of his pants; he felt some one taking his pistol, and turning saw Jackson walking away wdth it in his hand; when he felt the pistol leaving his pocket he endeavored to catch hold of it, but missed it. The pistol was a borrowed one, and belonged to a man by the name of Dudley; the accused returned the pistol to Dudley in about six weeks ; he did not follow the accused when he took the pistol, for the reason that he was afraid he would be shot. There were a number of persons on the ground at the time. He testifies, in the same connection, that the pistol was taken privately and without his knowledge. The latter statement must be discredited, because of his evidence that he saw Jackson walking towards him and felt some one taking the pistol from his pocket. Hence, he did have knowledge that it was being taken. The explanation given by the accused, which was not in any way controverted except in the foregoing evidence of the prosecutor, was, that
Reversed.