15 Ga. App. 400 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Tom Smith was tried on an indictment charging him
The motion for a new trial raises the point that there was a fatal variance between the allegations in the indictment and the proof, in that the indictment charged the defendant with simple larceny by taking and carrying away a certain bale of cotton, and there was no proof of any asportation whatever by the defendant, and hence it was not shown that he was guilty of the offense charged; and that if he was guilty of any crime, it was the offense of cheating and swindling. The first requisite of larceny is the taking of possession of the goods by the thief, and the act of taking possession involves
Waiving for the moment the question as to whether any asportation was proved, it does not appear that Moye took the bale of cotton into his possession or into the,possession of the Blakely Cotton Company “in good faith,” believing that he had made a genuine purchase of property belonging to Smithy since it appears, from his testimony, that the purchase in question was made by him with full knowledge that the title to the cotton was not in Smith, and with the purpose of allowing Smith to carry out his fraudulent intent. It is true that any asportation, however slight, is sufficient to support the charge of larceny; and this court held, in the ease of Smith v. State, 11 Ga. App. 197 (74 S. E. 1093), that “where a person fraudulently claims another’s property as his own and sells it, and the purchaser thereupon takes possession of it and takes it away, after having paid the seller for it, this constitutes
Here it appears that the defendant was standing by the bale of cotton when first discovered by the witness Moye, and that the defendant pointed out the cotton to Moye, as agent for the Farmers Warehouse Company, and requested a receipt for it, claiming it to be his own; and that he then sold to Moye, as agent for the Blakely Cotton Company, the receipt which Moye had issued to him in behalf of the warehouse company. Moye, it is true, stated that the cotton had been moved by some one from the place where he had seen it daily for several days, but he did not assert that the defendant moved the cotton, nor did any one else connect the defendant with its removal from where Moye had last seen it to the point “across from the scales” where it was situated when Moye first saw the defendant in the warehouse. It appears, from the evidence, that Moye issued to the defendant a receipt for this cotton, and thereafter, with the intent to entrap him in the perpetration of the
The defendant was undoubtedly guilty of an attempt to defraud some one, and this fact is made all the more obvious by his flat denial of any knowledge of any cotton transaction, without any explanation whatever-; and it may be that he was guilty of larceny, since he may have actually moved the bale of cotton from its accustomed place in the warehouse to the point near the door, “across from the scales/5 where the bale was situated when Moye first saw him with it on the day charged in the indictment, but this fact does not appear from the evidence, nor is there any evidence of asportation by any person purchasing the cotton in good faith from him; and hence the verdict was without any evidence to support it.
'Judgment reversed.