4 Utah 410 | Utah | 1886
Tbe appellant was convicted in the first district court of the offense of grand larceny. But one error is alleged, and that arises upon a refusal of the court to charge the jury as requested. It would seem from the record that the request for instruction was made orally at the conclusion of the charge of the court to the jury. The instruction asked was as follows: “If the jury believe from the- evidence that the defendant took this property under color of right, and in good- faith, believing it to be his property, there should be a verdict of not guilty, although it may afterwards turn out, and though the jury may believe it to be a fact, that the property belonged to Frederick Bird.” This instruction the court refused as asked, and said: “I charge you substantially as requested by counsel, with this exception: that if you find that he afterwards discovered it to be the property of Frederick Bird, and, after knowing that it was Frederick Bird’s property, that he still retained it, then, of course, he would be guilty.”
While the charge as given by the court is sustained by some of the authorities, (see State v. Ducker, 8 Or., 394; S. C., 34 Amer. Rep. 590, and note,) we think that the court erred, and that the great weight of authority is the other way. It is an elementary principle that ignorance or mistake in point of fact is, in all cases of supposed offense, a sufficient excuse: 1 Bish. Crim. Law, sec. 301; 1 Whart. Crim. Law, sec. 884.
In order to convict of larceny, the jury must be satisfied that the taking of the property was with a felonious intent. It is not sufficient to find that, after the taking, it was converted to the use of the defendant, with a felonious intent. It is necessary to find that the intent to steal existed at the time of the taking. No subsequent felonious intent will suffice: Wilson v. People, 39 N.
In this case, after having given that portion of the charge excepted to, and to which we have referred, the court also charged the jury, in connection with the objectionable portion, as follows: “The taking of the property must be found by you. If you find that, when the defendant took the property, he did so in entire good faith, and with the belief that he had a right to take it, then the offense is not complete. If he knew he was doing-wrong, if he knew it belonged to some one else, if he knew he was taking another man’s property, then he would be guilty.” We do not think that this cured the error, and judgment must be reversed.
We suggest that counsel in the lower courts should be required to conform to the statutes, and present their instructions in writing.