76 Cal. 460 | Cal. | 1888
The defendant, who is appellant here, was convicted of the crime of grand larceny, averred to have been committed by taking three dollars from the person of F.O. Slanker.
The motion in arrest of judgment should have been granted. There is no pretense of an averment in the information that the thing alleged to have been taken was the property of any person other than the appellant. The attorney-general admits this omission to be a fatal defect, “unless the code had changed the rule.” But the code does not make any change which would justify a pkader in omitting from an indictment any essential element of the crime sought to be charged. And under all definitions of larceny found in the books, the ownership of the property averred to have been stolen in some other person than the one charged with stealing it is an essential element of the crime. The code of this state provides that it must be the property “ of another.” And all the authorities are concurrent to the point that this essential part of the crime must be stated in the in-' dictment. (2 Archbold’s Criminal Law, 357 et seq.; 2 Russell on Crimes, 107.) To disregard this firmly fixed- and universal rule, in order to condone the faultiness of the information in this case, would be to commit anací of judicial usurpation. The case of People v. Hicks, 66 Cal. 103, cited for respondents, is against them. In that case the court held that there was a sufficient averment that the property stolen belonged to the prosecuting witness; and the opinion went upon the theory that such an averment was necessary. For this reason, therefore, the judgment must be reversed.
But as the case may possibly be tried again under another information or indictment, it is proper to notice .the second point made by appellant. The appellant
It is no doubt true, as a general proposition, that lar‘ceny is not committed when the property is taken with the consent of its owner; but it is difficult in some instances to determine whether certain acts constitute, in law, such “ consent.” And, under the authorities, we do not think that there is such consent where there is mere passive submission on the part of the owner of the goods taken, and no indication that he wishes them taken, and no knowledge by the taker that the owner wishes them taken, and no mutual understanding between the two,
“ I come now to the case which I promised at the beginning to consider and distinguish, from the present case. One Norden, having been informed that one of the early stage-coaches had been frequently robbed by a single highwayman, resolved to use his endeavors to apprehend the robber. For this purpose he put a little money and a pistol into his pocket and attended the coach in a post-chaise, till the highwayman came up to the company in the coach and to him, and presenting a weapon, demanded their money. Norden gave him the little money he had about him, and then jumped out of the chaise with his pistol in his hand, and with the assistance of some others took the highwayman.
“The robber was indicted about a year ago in this court for a robbery on Norden, and convicted. And very properly., in my opinion, was he convicted.
“ But that case differed widely from the present. In that case Norden set out with a laudable intention to use his endeavors for apprehending the highwayman, in case he should that morning come to rob the coach,*464 which at that time was totally uncertain;' and it was equally uncertain whether he would come alone or not. In the case now under consideration there was a most detestable conspiracy between Salmon and the rest of the prisoners that his property should be taken from him under the pretense and show of a robbery, and time, place, and every other circumstance were known to Salmon beforehand, and agreed to by him.”
In United States v. Whittier, 5 Dill. 35, cited by appellant, the defendant was tempted to send obscene matter through the mails by a decoy letter sent to him for the express purpose of inducing him to commit the offense.
In Dodge v. Brittain, Meigs, 84, the court merely holds that there would have been no larceny “ if the master had directed the servant to deliver the property to the thief instead of directing him to furnish facilities for his arriving at the place where ic was kept.” This case, indeed, is most strongly against the contention of appellant.
Bishop, under the head of “Plans to Entrap,” sums up the authorities on the subject as follows: “If a man suspects that an offense is to be committed, and, instead of taking precautions against it, sets a watch and detects and arrests the offenders, he does not thereby consent to their conduct, or furnish them any excuse. And in general terms, exposing property or neglecting to watch it, under expectation that a thief will take it, or furnishing any other facilities or temptations to such or any other wrong-doer, is not a consent in law.” (1 Bishop on Criminal Law, 262.)
From the authorities and upon principle we are of opinion that the conduct of the witness Blanker, a's detailed by him in his testimony, did not amount to consent in law, and affords no reason why the act of appellant in taking the money (if he did take it in the manner as sworn to by Blanker) was not larceny. If there had been preconcert of action between Slanke'r
We think that the instructions of the court were, upon - the whole, correct; but the record does not show any exceptions taken to them. At all events, if there shall be another trial, the court can readily make its instructions comply with this opinion.
Judgment and order appealed from reversed, and cause remanded.
Seabxs, C. J., Sharpstein, J., Paterson, J., McKinstry, J., and Thornton, J., concurred.