82 P. 703 | Or. | 1905
delivered the opinion.
The defendant was convicted of the crime of larceny, and appeals from the judgment rendered in pursuance thereof.
The subject of the larceny was $2,000, consisting of 100 gold $20 pieces, current money of the United States, alleged to have been the property of one John F. Roth, the prosecuting witness. Roth testified in substance that he was acquainted with the defendant; that he met him in Salem, Oregon, at the Willamette Hotel on the 23d day of September, 1904; that defendant came to a room in the hotel occupied by witness and a party by the name of Huston, and was introduced to him by Huston; that witness met Huston in Portland, about two days prior to this date, in Doctor Pohl’s office, and had a conversation with him-therein ; and that he explained what he was up for. Witness continues (quoting from the bill of exceptions):
*340 “Huston told me that two men here at Salem were trying to get up a foot race, and he said that they wanted some bona fide business man to come up here and hold the money for them; and he says, if he could get me to come up here, he would assure me that he would pay me well for my trouble. He said I did not need to bet anything. He said them two fellows had lots of money. All they wanted was for me to come up here and hold the money, and divide it fairly after the race was over, and I agreed to come up on those conditions ; and I came up here, and on Friday evening we went to the hotel, and Ryan came up to our room, and Huston introduced me to him, and he [Ryan] explained the thing differently. He said he wanted to bet some money on a foot race against Raymond. He said Raymond was a friend of his, and he wanted me to bet against Raymond for him, and he said he would pay me for my trouble. Next day he met us again and wanted to know if I had any money in the bank to show I was a business man in Portland. The next day Ryan came to the hotel again, and wanted to know if I had any money to show, in case of an argument, that everything was all right, that I was responsible, and I told him that I had a bankbook, the money that was put in the bank from our business, and a small check, and he said in case of an argument he wanted to show about $2,000 in the bank ; that that would be enough to satisfy Raymond.probably, if he lost that much money and wanted to protest the race. He wanted me to go back and make arrangements so I could get $2,000, and I went back and explained the case to my brother-in-law, and he let me have that amount of money. Ryan said we might not have to draw it and I agreed to it, and we came back here Tuesday, Huston and I, .and Ryan met us and went to the hotel with us, and we had dinner, and after dinner he [Ryan] went out. About 1 o’clock Ryan met us again, and he took us down to his. room — it was over a saloon on the corner — and he introduced me to this man Raymond, and Raymond said that he wanted to bet some money on a foot race. Ryan gave me a bunch of greenbacks marked $2,500, and he said, when Raymond came, ‘You bet this money with him,’ so Raymond said he wanted to bet, and he put down $2,500*341 in greenbacks. Raymond said he would go back to the bank, and Ryan gave me a hunch, $3,000, all in greenbacks, and I bet Raymond all this other bunch. It was put in a little grip, and Raymond went downstairs with this man, Morris. While he was down there, Ryan gave me another bunch of $5,000 in greenbacks, but he says, ‘Go down and draw your money,’ and he said, ‘I want the money.’ I did not think anything about it being a scheme, and I went down to draw my money. It was $2,000. I got it all in 20-dollar gold pieces. When I got back. Raymond says, ‘I have got $5,000 more,’ and I bet him the $5,000 which Ryan gave me. Ryan says, ‘Did you draw your money from the bank?’ — and I had it in a little hag, and Ryan took it and he put it in a grip and he says, ‘We will run the race,’ and he says, ‘Leave the money in the bank,’ and he stepped out about five or ten minutes and came back and showed me a little receipt, which read : ‘One grip and contents deposited here.’ He folded it up and put it in his pocket, and said, ‘After the foot race we will get it,’ and we went out to the ball ground, aod, when we got there, there were a few boys in there, about 16 or 18 years old, playing ball. Then it was decided to go back of the ball ground, and they went back there, and Ryan stepped off 60 feet and told me to go to one end while he measured off 60 feet, and I stayed up there, and the men started to run and one fell down, and Ryan said to Raymond : ‘We will run this thing over inside of 10 days,’ and he said: ‘All right. We will go to the race track or some other place,’ and we agreed all around that we would run it off in 10 days, and Ryan said: ‘We will leave the money in the bank until after the race comes off,’ and I went back to Portland that-same night, and Huston went along.”
The witness further testified in substance that he came to Salem on the 23d of September in company with Huston; that Ryan, Raymond, Morris, Huston, and another man accompanied him to the race; that Morris was one of the runners and Huston the other; that Ryan was supposed to be betting on Huston and Raymond on Morris.
The defendant offered evidence tending to show that he
The foregoing testimony illustrates fairly the respective positions of the parties litigant. There was an objection interposed to the prosecuting witness detailing what was said and done by Huston in Portland, that being two days prior to the time they met the defendant in Salem, on the ground that such evidence was incompetent by which to establish the defendant’s guilt. The court, however, permitted it to go to the jury upon the assurance on the part of the State’s attorney that he would connect up Huston with the defendant in the transaction later on in the trial. Error is,now predicated upon the admission of such testi
*346 “If, however, the property was received or taken by the defendant with a felonious intent at the time, he is guilty of larceny, even though it' were by the owner’s consent. Any preconcerted plan to obtain money, and an intent to steal coupled with that plan, is felonious. If money is obtained by trick, artifice, or device, as fraudulently obtaining it under color of a bet, inducing a person to bet merely for the purpose of getting possession of the stakes deposited, and with the intent to appropriate them, regardless of the event on which the bet was made, is larceny. So you are to consider whether or not this whole transaction was a mere scheme or device to steal Roth’s money. If it appears to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant entered into such scheme, either by himself or with others, intending all the time to steal this money from Roth, and you should believe that beyond a reasonable doubt, and further find that he did get the money by such scheme, you should find him guilty as charged in the indictment.”
The meaning intended to.be conveyed by the language quoted is elucidated by a preceding clause and others that followed, whereby it was explained that, if the property was received in good faith, a subsequent wrongful conversion would not support an allegation of larceny in the original taking, and, further, that if the bet was made, and Ryan was a stakeholder in good faith, he could pay the money over to the winner at any time after the race, and before a return was demanded by Roth, and the transac-' tion would, not constitute larceny. The legal significance of the term “bet” or “wager” is well understood. The contention of appellant is that, if Roth bet his money on the foot race in question, it is not of the slightest legal consequence how he came to do so, whether he was so induced by fraud or not, or whether the foot race was fair or not; that in either or any event he parted with his money voluntarily, and, there not being present the element of trespass, there could be no larceny.
Now, if the defendant and his co-conspirators made use of the bet as a scheme or device to secure possession of Roth’s money, and at the same time the bet was merely simulated, it not being intended that there should be a bona fide foot race between the supposed contestants, and the money was received to be disposed of on the result of such race, and the race was not run bona fide, and was not so intended from the beginning, then it was larceny' in the defendant to appropriate it. The money was received by the defendant.to be disposed of in a particular way; that is, to be held as stakes to abide the event of a bona fide foot race. If Roth won, the money was to be returned to him with his winning, but, if he lost, then to be turned over to Raymond. Such was the effect of the wager, if real. If, however, there was not to be a bona fide race, and the defendant intended to retain the money to his own use, and not to dispose of it on account of Roth, or in a particular way to which Roth had assented, then there -was a larcenous taking, for Roth would never have assented to staking his money if he had known that it was to be retained in any event. Though he may have voluntarily given the money into the hands of the defend
The circuit court properly distinguished between a real bet and one that was merely colorable or simulated for .the purpose of getting wrongful possession of Roth’s money, and the instructions are not vulnerable to the objections interposed.
The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.