108 Wash. 276 | Wash. | 1919
The defendant, Donovan, was jointly charged with the commission of the crime of grand larceny with one "Whalen, by information filed in the superior court for Spokane county, which information charged the commission of the crime as follows:
‘ ‘ The said defendants, James A. Donovan and J. T. Whalen, on or about the twenty-first day of September, 1918, in the county of Spokane, state of Washington, then and there being, and having then and there taken into their possession from one J. L. Smith more than 175 pint bottles of whiskey, the property of and belonging to said J. L. Smith, by the trick and device of the defendant James A. Donovan then appearing as a police officer of the city of Spokane, with authority, as such officer, to seize such whiskey from said J. L. Smith, the said J. T. Whalen then and there accompanying the said James A. Donovan and confederating with him, and so having obtained and taken into their possession the said whiskey, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously take, carry away, conceal, and appropriate to their own use the said whiskey, consisting of more than 175 pint bottles filled with whiskey, the property of and belonging to J. L. Smith, of the value of more than $400, with the intent to deprive and defraud the owner thereof.”
Donovan’s trial in that court sitting with a jury resulted in a verdict of guilty as charged, upon which judgment was rendered against him, from which judgment he has appealed to this court.
The first contention made by counsel for Donovan is that the information fails to charge him with the commission of any crime under the laws of this state. The principal argument made in that behalf is, in substance, that the information charges facts showing that the whiskey alleged to have been stolen was at the time outlawed property the ownership of which the law did not protect, and therefore was not the subject of larceny. It may be conceded that the facts
In Commonwealth v. Rourke, 10 Cush. (Mass.) 397, which seems to have become a leading case in this country, Justice Cushing, speaking for the court, having under consideration the question of whether or not an indictment could be sustained for the larceny of money which had been received by one from whom it had been stolen for the sale of intoxicating liquor in violation of law, said:
“It has been very ingeniously argued by the defendant’s counsel, that money, so obtained, is destitute of the rights of property, and being thus in a manner outlawed, is not entitled to legal protection, and is incapable of being the subject-matter of larceny; in a word, that it may be stolen with absolute impunity . . .
“We apprehend it would be no answer to an indictment for larceny properly drawn, to say that the object larceniously taken, belonged to nobody, provided the thing were in its nature property; 2 East, P. C. 606; 2 Russ, on Crimes, (6th Am. ed.) 96; or that it belonged to some unknown owner; for then, by force of the statute, and by common law too, it would be protected in the hands of the possessor. But it is further contended, that such possessor must be a lawful possessor; nay, if he be proved owner against all the world, yet, if the property be acquired by breach of law, the law will in no respect exert itself to aid the guilty party to retain the possession, or to regain it when lost. This position is advanced on the strength of the case of Gregg v. Wyman, 4 Cush. 322, and other cases of the*282 same class, in which it has been adjudged as a doctrine of the common law, that courts of justice will not afford their assistance for the enforcement of any contract based on a criminal or unlawful undertaking or act.
“We fully'recognize the soundness of this doctrine, supported as it is by obvious considerations of public policy and justice. But the inference, deduced therefrom in argument, by no means follows. That same common law, which, in its integrity and wisdom, refuses to lend itself to be the instrument, even indirectly, for the execution of a criminal contract, will as little condescend to throw its mantle over crime itself. The law punishes larceny, because it is larceny; . . . And the law punishes the larceny of property, not solely because of any rights of the proprietor, but also because of its own inherent legal rights as property; and, therefore,' even he, who larceniously takes the stolen object from a thief whose hands have but just closed upon it, may himself be convicted therefor, in spite of the criminality of the possession of his immediate predecessor in crime. This principle is coeval with the common law itself as a collection of received opinions and rules, for we have to go back to the Year-Books to find its first judicial announcement. ’ ’
And then, following a review of English and American decisions, the learned justice concluded as follows:
“We think it is well established at common law, therefore, that property, though unlawfully acquired, may nevertheless be the subject-matter of larceny; and we think the cases decided are broad enough to cover the present or any similar form of unlawful acquisition.”
It is true that was the larceny of money which had been received by one from whom it was taken for the sale of outlawed liquor, and that the money as such, apart from its being so acquired by the one from whom it was taken, of course was not outlawed property. Upon the law as announced in that decision, however,
In Bales v. State, 3 W. Va. 685, there was involved the larceny of certain ivory checks used for gambling purposes, the property right in which was plainly outlawed. Answering the contention that such checks were not the subject of larceny, the court very pertinently observed:
“The important question therefore is, whether these checks, kept and used for gambling contrary to the statute, can be the subject of larceny? That they could not have been recovered by action, is clear on the general principle that no court would lend its aid to the guilty keeper or owner to recover his illegal articles. And the case of Spaulding v. Preston, 21 Vt. 10, is directly in point. But still, the question recurs, whether larceny can be committed of such prohibited things. And, to hold that it could not, would be to run the hazard of encouraging larceny by discouraging gaming.
“The law punishes gaming and the keeping for gaming purposes articles of like character with those mentioned, and provides the mode of seizing and destroying them by the hand of an officer and the. order of the magistrate. And it is perhaps more politic that resort be had to the mode prescribed by law for that purpose, than to encourage a resort to theft for discouraging gambling. The cases cited from Massachusetts, where the subject was twice fully considered, take this view of it. Commonwealth v. Coffee, 9 Gray, 137; Com. v. Rourke, 10 Cush., 397; . . .”
It is worthy of note that the court rested its decision upon the two Massachusetts cases above noticed. Among other decisions to the same effect we note: Commonwealth v. Smith, 129 Mass. 104, and State v. May, 20 Iowa 305; the latter involving the theft of out
Further contention is made that the information failed to charge a larceny of Smith’s whiskey, because it appears upon the. face of the information that the whiskey was taken into the custody of the law when taken by Donovan. Whether or not the whiskey was then taken into the custody of the law, we think, depends upon the intent with which Donovan took it from Smith. We think it plain that the language of the information means that Donovan took the whiskey, not in good faith as a public officer, but with intent to appropriate it to his own use. Otherwise the allegation that he took it by “the trick and device” of appearing as a police officer, would be meaningless. We think the information does not show upon its face that the liquor was taken into the custody of the law; but that the facts therein alleged show to the contrary. But, in any event, we think it would be subject to larceny as Smith’s whiskey until lawfully ordered to be destroyed.
Among other instructions given to the jury by the trial court was the following:
“Under the law of the state of Washington grand larceny is substantially defined as follows: Every person who, with intent to deprive or defraud the owner-thereof, shall steal or obtain property of another of the value of more than $25 shall be guilty of the crime of grand larceny.”
It is contended that this was erroneous to the prejudice of Donovan because it did not contain a statement of all of the elements of the larceny with which he was charged. We think it is plain that other instructions
Certain instructions given by the court told the jury, in substance, that Donovan could be found guilty under the charge of the information if he took the whiskey with intent to deprive the owner thereof and appropriate it to his own use, or if he seized the whiskey in good faith as an officer of the law and then appropriated it to his own use, meaning, manifestly, appropriating it to his own use before the making of any lawful order for its destruction. This, it is contended, was error prejudicial to Donovan. Section 2601, Rem. Code, defining larceny and the several ways in which it may be committed, reads, in so far as we need here notice its language, as follows:
“Every person who, with intent to deprive or defraud the owner thereof—
“ (1) Shall take, lead or drive away the property of another; or
“(2) Shall obtain from the owner or another the possession of or title to any property, ... by color or aid of any fraudulent or false representation, personation or pretense or by any false token or writing or by any trick, device, bunco game or fortunetelling; or
“(3) Having any property in his possession, custody or control, ... as a public officer . . . or by competent authority to take or hold such possession, custody or Control, . . . • shall secrete, withhold or appropriate the same to his own use or to the*286 use of any person other than the true owner or person entitled thereto; . . .
“Steals such property and shall be guilty of larceny. ’ ’
The argument seems to be that the information charges larceny by embezzlement only, under subdv. 3 of this section, and that, therefore, the question of Donovan being guilty of larceny in the original taking of the whiskey should not have been submitted to the jury. The information, as we view it, in effect charges the original taking of the whiskey by Donovan and its appropriation to his own use with intent to deprive Smith, the owner thereof, of it as occurring at the same time, or at least that the act of taking and appropriation followed in such close relationship as to constitute one continuous transaction in so far as Donovan’s criminal intent was concerned. There was ample evidence to support this view of the facts. It is not claimed that the information charges more than one crime, and we think it could not be successfully so argued. We think that these instructions did not erroneously submit to the jury both the question of Donovan’s being guilty of larceny in the original taking of the whiskey and the question of his guilt in appropriating it to his own use following the original taking; nor are these two theories of his guilt inconsistent.
Certain instructions requested by counsel for Donovan to be given were refused by the court to be given. As to the errors claimed in the refusal of the court to give such instructions, we think they are sufficiently disposed of by what we have already said touching the question of the whiskey being subject to larceny, since the requested instructions touch that question only, in so far as we regard these assigned errors worthy of serious consideration here.
Holcomb, C. J., Mount, Fullerton, and Bridges, JJ., concur.