By the Court,
Appellant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny. He appeals from the judgment, and the order overruling his motion for new trial. He was accused and found guilty of stealing two horses, two saddles, and a pair of spurs. He admitted that he took the property, and removed it about five miles away. He said his object was to put the owner to all the expense and trouble possible in order to find the property; that he had no idea of benefiting himself in any way, his only object having been to get revenge.
I. The court instructed the jury that if they believed beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant took the property, as alleged in the indictment, with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of the property, and without an intention to return the same, it was a felonious intent, and the defendant was guilty. It is claimed that this instruction is erroneous in stating that the crime of grand larceny may be committed, although the taker of the property alleged to have been stolen derives no benefit, and does not intend or expect to be benefited therefrom. If one of the essential elements of larceny is an intention to profit by the conversion of the property, then the instruction under consideration was incorrect. A court cannot instruct a jury that certain facts constitute a certain offense, unless every essential fact necessary to constitute the offense be included in the statement. (Weston v. U. S., 5 Cranch C. C. 494.) Although the authorities upon this question are somewhat .conflicting, those sustaining the instruction greatly pre
In State v. Ryan,
In Dignowitty v. State,
And, said the court, in Hamilton v. State,
Sustaining the same doctrine in Warden v. State,
In State v. South, 28 N. J. Law, 28, the question was, whether the fraudulently depriving the owner of the temporary use of a chattel is larceny at common law; whether the felonious intent or animus furandi may consist with an intention to return the chattel to the owner. It was held that if the prop
In Berry v. State,
Reliance is also placed upon section 1783 of Wharton’s American Criminal Law, where the author says: “In this country there has been some reluctance to accept this supposed modification of the common-law definition of larceny, and in one or two cases it has been expressly rejected. Thus it ha3
It will be found, upon an examination of those cases, that no one of them sustains the text.
Mr. Stephen, in his General View of the Criminal Law of England, 127, says: “It is larceny to take and carry away a persona] chattel from the possession of its owner with intent to deprive him of the property.”
Mr. Roscoe, in his Criminal Evidence, 631, says: “Eyre, C. B., in the definition given by him, says, ‘ Larceny is the wrongful taking of the goods with intent to spoil the owner of them lucri causa ’; and Blackstone says, ‘ The taking must be felonious; that is, done animo furandi, or, as the civil law expresses it, lucri causaJ The point arrived at by these two expressions, animo furandi and lucri causa, the meaning of which has been much discussed, seems to be this: that the goods must be taken into the possession of the thief with the intention of depriving the owner of his property in them. * * * Property is the right to the possession, coupled with an ability to exercise that right. Bearing this in mind, we may perhaps safely define larceny as follows: The wrongful taking possession of the goods of another with intent to deprive the owner of his property in them.” (And see Archb. Crim. Pr. & PL, Pomeroy’s notes, 1185; Barb. Crim. Law, 174; 2 Bish. Crim. Law, 848.)
Against these authorities, besides Hawkins’s case and Wharton, above cited, we are referred to four cases, viz.: People v. Woodward,
There is nothing in the instructions quoted opposed to the doctrine we are endeavoring to maintain, although there is much in the address to the jury which does not accord with our ideas of the law. To constitute larceny the taking must be felonious, and it is so when the intent is to permanently deprive the owner of his property against his will. The court did not err in giving the fourth instruction.
2. Objection is made to the third instruction, which is substantially the same as was given in Hing’s Case,
3. The second instruction was correct. (People v. Cronin,
The first part of this instruction was copied from that given in People v. Gleason,
Such we declared was the true rule. It was consonant with reason, and upheld by the latest and best authorities.
The instruction given and upheld in Gleason’s case we do not like; and we did not say that the court’s instruction in Levigne’s case would have been correct by itself alone. We only declared it correct as it was given, in connection with the two requested by defendant. We do not like the first instruction given in this case. All in all, it conveys to our minds the idea that evidence of the defendant’s good character could not be considered, unless, from the other evidence admitted, the jury had a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt. Upon the question of guilt or innocence, they should have been charged to consider all the evidence in the case, including that in relation to character, and if therefrom they believed him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, previous good character would not authorize an acquittal.'
But although the instruction in question was not proper, it ought not, in this case, to reverse the judgment, because the undisputed facts, his own testimony included, made him guilty, no matter how fair a character he had previously borne. He admitted the taking, and did not claim that he intended to
Judgment and order appealed from affirmed.
Notes
