25 Wash. 555 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered hy
Appellant was convicted in the superior court of King county of the crime of larceny, and from a judgment and sentence appeals to this court.
It appears from the evidence that one Thomas Daley, who was a country hoy, while in the city of Seattle was met hy one Andrew Samson, who was a stranger to him. Daley and Samson, after some conversation, went to a saloon, and into a small'room, and were discussing some por
"Appellant requested the court to give to the jury the following instruction:
“If you find the prosecuting witness Daley engaged in a game of cards, and intended to bet and win or lose his money bet, as money is usually lost or won at cards, and allowed the money to be taken from the table without objection on his part because he had lost the bet, you will find the defendant not guilty, whatever the character of the game may have been.”
There can be no other conclusion from the evidence in the case than that Hilger, Samson, and the appellant, Slcil
“If by trick or artifice the owner of property is induced ' to part with the custody or naked possession of it to one who receives the property animo furandi, the owner still meaning to retain the right of property, the taking will be • larceny. Thus it is larceny where the defendants so fraudulently conduct a gambling game or lottery as to give the prosecutor no chance of winning, and he parts with his money through fraud or fear.”
See, also, McClain, Criminal Law, § 560.
When Daley placed his money on the hazard of the cards, he did not intend to part with the title, unless it was fairly won by his opponents. When Samson, Hilger, and Skilbrick knew, before the cards were dealt, or afterward by discovery, that Daley was to lose his money through their manipulations, and where they induced him into the game; and one of them, by telling him he had the best hand, persuaded him to place his money on the table, for the purpose of obtaining his money, as they evidently did in this case, it was as much larceny as though they had induced him to lay his money on the table for them to examine and then had taken it by some sleight-of-hand performance, which Daley did not understand, or by force under his protest. The object of. the conspirators was to get the money. That they got possession of it through a trick or through fraud, by leading Daley to believe he would stand ■ an equal chance of winning when he had none, or that they got it by taking it without his consent,
The instruction complained of assumes that where a person loses at a dishonest game, not knowing it to be such, the person conducting such game is not liable for larceny. The weight of authority does not support the appellant’s contention. It was not error of the court to refuse the instruction.
The cause is therefore affirmed.
Eeavis, C. J., and Fullerton, Anders, Hadley and White, JJ., concur.