144 Mo. 387 | Mo. | 1898
On the sixteenth day of November, 1896, Mrs. Callie Hamilton, who resided at number 1827 Olive street in the city of St. Louis, while walking on Olive street between Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth, about 3:30 o’clock in the afternoon, saw defendant approaching her as if he recognized her and with his hand extended, as she thought, to speak to her and shrike hands with her, and thinking he was an acquaintance she looked up in his face when he suddenly snatched her purse and ran away. She at once pursued him, and several men and boys joined in the pursuit but he escaped. The police department was at once notified and defendant was arrested, and Mrs. Hamilton positively identified defendant as the thief. She testified that her purse or pocket-book contained when defendant snatched it about $16 in cash, a certificate of deposit issued to her by the Mechanics Bank of St.. Louis; ten shares of stock of the par value of $1,000 in the Universal Light and Power Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this State, and a ruby about three or four carats, an old family heirloom which she had never had valued. The stock she thought was worth par, as she was not aware it had either appreciated or depreciated, as the corporation was yet a new one. Her husband had paid $1,000 for it. The certificate of deposit
1. The indictment charges that the defendant on the sixteenth day of November, 1896, at the city of St. Louis, one pocketbook, two tax receipts, $27.50 lawful money of the United States, one ruby stone, one certificate of ten shares of the capital stock of the Universal Light and Power Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, and one certificate of deposit of the Mechanics Bank of St. Louis, good for the payment of $200, the description of which said certificate of deposit is to the grand jurors unknown, all of the value $500, and all the money, goods, chattels and personal property of Callie Hamilton, then and there being found, feloniously did. then and there steal, take and carry away with the intent then and these to deprive the owner of the use thereof and to convert the same to his own use contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.
It is insisted, first, that the certificate of deposit issued by the Mechanics Bank of St. Louis to Mrs. Hamilton for the moneys deposited by her in said bank and which is alleged-in the indictment to be good for the payment to her of $200, is not the subject of larceny under the laws of Missouri. Choses in action were not the subject of larceny at common law, but by express statute they are made so in this State. B. S. 1889, secs. 3535 and 3539. Section 3535 makes the felonious stealing of uany right in action” of the value of $30 grand larceny. Section 3539 is as follows-. “If the property stolen consist of any bond, covenant, note, bill of exchange, draft, order or receipt, or' any other evidence of debt, or of any public security issued by the United States or this State, or any instrument
II. He makes a more specific objection to the indictment, namely, that conceding the certificate of deposit is such an instrument that the stealing thereof would be grand larceny, this indictment is bad because the pleader has omitted the words “the money due thereon or secured thereby and remaining unsatisfied” found in section 3539. Section 3539 is in all respects similar to the New York statute of 1862 (2 N. Y. Stats, at Large, 699, mar. page 679, sec. 66) save that the New York statute instead of providing as section 3539 does that the amount specified in the stolen instrument shall be “prima facie evidence of the value of the article so stolen,” enacts that “it shall be deemed the value of the article so stolen.” In Phelps v. People, 72 N. Y. 334, the identical point now under consideration was made, viz., that the indictment did not allege “the amount due thereon or secured thereby and remaining unsatisfied” but the court of appeals replied that, “this section does not make any part of the description of the offense; it prescribes a rule of evidence and furnishes a mode of providing the value of the draft stolen.” Says the court: “The very reason of the passage of the statute, making choses in action the subject of larceny, was the rule of common law, that their
III. Counsel urge that the indictment is too indefinite and cites State v. Murphy, 141 Mo. 267. Reference to that case will show the language of the
IY. Nor is the objection tenable that the pleader did not allege the separate value of each of the articles stolen. The stealing of several articles at one and the same time and by the same act, constitutes but one larceny. State v. Lorton, 7 Mo. 55; State v. Daniels, 32 Mo. 558; State v. Morphin, 37 Mo. 373. And where the indictment thus charges the larceny of several articles it is sufficient to charge their value in the aggregate
V. As to any supposed variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proofs it is sufficient to say that the indictment being sufficient, whether the evidence offered tended to support it became a question of competency, and this the defendant waived by making no objections thereto, and by saving no exceptions. The circuit court did not find it material or prejudicial R. S. 1889, see. 4114; State v. Barker, 64 Mo. 282; State v. Sneed, 91 Mo. 552; State v. Wammack, 70 Mo. 410.
VI. Having considered the objections both in the indictment and evidence, to the charge as to stealing the certificate of deposit, and held they are not sustainable, we still are of opinion that there was ample evE deuce to convict on the charge of stealing the ten shares of stock in the Universal Light and Power Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this State. No objection to the pleading of the larceny of this stock can be sustained and the proof was that it was worth $1,000 and there was no objection or exception saved as to this evidence. As to the point that Mrs. Hamilton was only the bailee of this stock it was ruled in State v. Moore, 101 Mo. 316, that ‘‘when bailed goods (as in this case) are stolen by a stranger, ownership may be laid either in the bailor or bailee, principal or agent.” Wharton] s Cr. L. [9 Ed.], sec. 932a; 2 Bish. Cr. Law, sec. 824.
VII. The point as to the prosecuting attorney referring to the defendant’s failure to testify is based upon a misapprehension of the speech. No such reference was made and his comments on the testimony of Prew were legitimate. State v. Kelly, 73 Mo. loc. cit. 614.
Having considered all the exceptions urged, we affirm the judgment.