The facts are stated in the opinion.
The defendant asked the court to charge: "If the jury believe that the cotton was placed in the hands of the defendant by its owner, and the defendant, so having charge of it, took some of it or otherwise disposed of it to his own use, he would not be guilty of larceny." In lieu thereof the court charged "that while it was a general rule of law that the agent or employee, or other person to whose possession the owner of personal property had entrusted it, could not commit larceny, because such person had come into possession of the property legally, still there are exceptions to the rule, as when the accused had resorted to trickery, fraud or deception in order to get the possession; that if in this case the defendant had taken advantage of the liberties allowed him as a cotton sampler, it being necessary that he should take a small portion of cotton from each bale in order to sample it, and had the guilty intent to appropriate some of the (666) cotton to his own use after he had taken it from the bale, this would be larceny, although he had the permission of the owners to take the cotton from each bale." The prayer was substantially given, though not in the very words asked. The addition made thereto by the court is sustained by ample authority. S. v. England,
The ownership would have been properly laid either in the owner or in the bailee. S. v. Allen,
NO ERROR.
Cited: S. v. Ruffin,