65 So. 310 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The indictment and demurrers thereto will be set out in the report of the case. The court sustained the demurrers as to the first count, and overruled them as to the second, its action in doing which is the only question presented for review.
The act (see Gen. Ac^s 1911, p. 625) amending section 7833 of the Code, and creating the offense sought to be charged, thus provides:
“Any person who willfully commits any trespass on the lands of another, * * * by severing and carrying away from the freehold any produce thereof or any property or thing thereto attached the value of which was less than $5.00 to the owner before being detached from such freehold, under such circumstances as would render the trespass a larceny if the thing severed and carried away were personal property, must, on conviction, be fined not more than $200.00,” etc.
Paraphrasing the second count of the indictment, it charges that the defendant “did sever and carry away from the freehold of Yernon Lamar produce thereof, consisting of four bushels of peaches, of the value of $4, under such circumstances as would render the trespass a larceny if the thing [peaches] so severed and carried away had been personal property.”
While the language of the' indictment would have been more apt if it had charged in the verbiage of the
We are of opinion that the indictment meets every criticism of the demurrer, except one. While it alleges the value of the peaches, it fails to allege that this value was their value “to the owner before, being detached from the freehold.” For aught appearing to the contrary, the value alleged was their value after severance. Whether in all cases it is the same or more or less, we do not judicially know; but, for the defendant’s act in taking the peaches to. fall within the punitive provisions of the statute, their value “must be less than $5.00 to the owner before being detached from the freehold.” —Gen. Acts 1911, p. 625.
We confess our inability to understand the legislative purpose in this provision; but so the law is plainly written. Evidently the author assumed that the lar■ceny statutes covered the offense if the value of the property exceeded $5. We do not so find. — Code, §§ 7324, 7325.
For the error of the court in overruling the demurrer, the judgment is reversed.
Reversed and remanded.