30 Mo. 26 | Mo. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was arraigned on an indictment for stealing in a dwelling-house. He was found guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary.
The question raised on the trial was, whether, if personal property of less value than ten dollars is stolen in a dwelling-house, the thief can be convicted under the thirty-second section of the third article of the act concerning crimes and their punishments, which provides that if any larceny be committed in a dwelling-house or in any boat or vessel, or by stealing from the person in the night time, the offender may be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not exceeding ten years. The twenty-fifth section of the same article makes the stealing of personal property of the value of ten dollars and more grand larceny, which is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary. The thirty-first section, which immediately precedes that under which thé de
As the section under which this indictment was framed immediately follows that defining petit larceny, and as the statute declares that if “ any larceny” be committed in a dwelling-house, the offender shall be punished “ by imprisonment in the penitentiary,” it is obvious that the section embraces both grand and petit larceny. The same offence may be committed under circumstances which will greatly enhance its guilt. Property which is necessarily exposed to the depredations of offenders must be protected by severer punishment than that which may be guarded and protected. So those who would make a visit to a dwelling-house a screen to hide a theft, should be punished more severely than one who would steal the same thing found in a place calculated to create a temptation to do the act. The one act is indicative of a much more depraved disposition in the offender than
the other. The judgment is affirmed.