65 N.C. 305 | N.C. | 1871
The evidence on the trial was substantially; that the prosecutor, some time in the month of March, 1870, was in the defendant's barroom, in the town of Fayetteville, having around his body, next to his skin, a cloth belt containing money in United States Treasury notes, National Bank notes, two promissory notes of individual persons and some other papers; that he was sick, and his suspenders becoming unbuttoned, a Mr. Davis who was there remarked upon it when the defendant's bar-keeper went to the prosecutor and buttoned them up, and in doing so, said that the prosecutor had money on his person; that Davis made light of it, when the bar-keeper pulled up his shirt, the defendant being then in the room about four feet from him; that the prosecutor remained in the room sitting down, feeling very sick with his head bent down and his eyes shut, when he felt the hand of the defendant, who was then the only other person in the room, at (306) his left side, and raising up saw the wad of packages in his hand, and told him to give back his money, to which the defendant replied, "No, I'll keep it;" that he, the prosecutor, then went out and soon came back to the defendant's bar-room, when he told him to go out, and put his hand on him, and he left; that he, the prosecutor, returned next morning and asked defendant for his money, when he said that he did not have it, and had lost it; that the prosecutor had never recovered it; that before the belt with the money was taken, the prosecutor had on the same day deposited with the defendant, for safe *233 keeping, his pocket-book, containing some money, and his shawl, neither of which articles had ever been returned to him.
The defendant's counsel insisted that if this evidence were taken to be true, it was not sufficient to support the charge of larceny, for that it proved only a trespass.
His Honor instructed the jury that if the defendant took the articles from the person of the prosecutor, under the circumstances testified to by him, with the intent to appropriate them to his own use, they should find him guilty of larceny. There was a verdict of guilty, upon which judgment was given, and the defendant appealed.
The defence relied mainly upon the authority of the State v.Deal,
At the time of the taking, the prosecutor was apparently in a situation not to know what was going on or even if he should be aroused for a moment, the defendant may well have calculated that all remembrance of a transaction done so gently, and in a manner (308) not to make an impression on his beclouded mind, would pass away before he became sober.
But the jury, having by their verdict, established the guilty intent of the taking, it only remains for us to see if there was a sufficient asportation to constitute the offence of larceny. The offence was complete the moment the defendant severed the belt from the person of the prosecutor, and got it fully into his own possession. The evidence is, that "the wad of packages" was already in the hands of the defendant when the prosecutor raised up.
In Lapier's case, 1 Leach. Cr. L. 320, it is held that tearing an ear ring loose from a lady's ear is a sufficient carrying away to constitute the offence of larceny, although the ring was only removed from the ear and lodged in the curls of her hair, where she found it upon reaching home.
Lapier's case, with others there cited, establish the principle that it is a sufficient carrying away to constitute the offence of larceny, if the goods are removed from the place where they were, and the felon has for an instant the entire and absolute possession of them.
Judgment affirmed. Let this be certified.
Per curiam.
Judgment affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Jones,
(309)