122 Ky. 35 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
OPINION by
— Reversing.
The appellee, Bunion Triplett, was indicted by the grand jury of Pike county, charged with the offense of robbery. To this he pleaded not guilty, but upon trial the jury returned a verdict of guilty of larceny, and fixed his punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of two years. Prom the judgment based upon this verdict, this appeal is prosecuted.
The facts, in brief, are these: The appellant was the owner of certain cattle (oxen). One Scott instituted an action against him in the Pike Circuit Court, in which process was issued under which the cattle were taken and placed in the hands of the court’s receiver, C. C. Boles, who turned them over to S. P. Leslie, to be kept on pasture pending the litigation. "While the cattle were thus in the possession of Leslie, the appellant came-to his house with a gun on his shoulder, asked for him, and, when he came out, inquired if he had the cattle, and where they Were. In response,-Leslie said to the appellant that they were in his field, but that, unless he (appellant) was duly
We have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that the special bailiff, Leslie, was intimidated by his knowledge that appellant was a “bad man,” and the additional fact that he had with him a gun; but it does not follow therefrom that the act of driving off the cattle openly and quietly constituted appellant a felon. Larceny is the unlawful taking and carrying away the goods or property of another, secretly or furtively, with the felonious intent to appropriate them to the use of the trespasser. Robbery is called
In the case of Searls v. Commonwealth, 7 Ky. Law Rep., 223, it appeared that -a sheriff had levied upon a raft of logs owned jointly by the execution defendant and two other persons, and notified the joint owners of the levy, and they would be prosecuted if they removed the raft. Notwithstanding this notice, the execution defendant and one of the other joint owners removed the logs. Held: “That there was no evidence of any felonious intent on the part of the owners in the taking of the logs-, but an assertion of right to the property that they believed they could exercise without the consent of the sheriff. Therefore the facts did not authorize their conviction of the offense of larceny.” In .the case of Sikes v. Commonwealth, 34 S. W., 902; 17 Ky. Law Rep., 1353, it Was held that, where a person retook money, which he had lost in gambling from the winner, by presenting a pistol to his head and thus putting him in fear, it is not robbery, because the alleged trespasser was only retaking his own. The same principle was upheld in Thompson v. Commonwealth, 18 S. W. 1022; 13 Ky. Law Rep., 916. In the case of Utz v. Commonwealth, 3 Ky. Law Rep., 88, an infant had
Clark, in his wtork on Criminal Law (page 285), says: “To take one’s own property by force is not robbery, for, as in larceny, the property must be another’s; and for a person to take property by force under a bona fide belief that it belongs to him is not robbery, for there must be the same felonious intent as in case of larceny. Felonious intent is always essential, and an instruction ignoring that element is ground for reversing a conviction. ’ ’ In Bishop’s New Criminal Law, Yol. 2, section 1162a, sub-section 4, it is said: “As in simple larceny, so in this compound-called robbery, a taking under an honest claim of right, however violent or wrongful, comes short of the full measure of the offense.” And in a note to Jones v. Commonwealth 57 L. R. A. 443, the rule is thus stated: “When the property is taken by force, actual or constructive, under color of right or claim of ownership, it is not robbery.’’ Citing Barnes v. State, 9 Tex. App. 128; People v. Vice, 21 Cal. 344; State v. Hollyway, 41 Iowa, 200; 20 Am. Rep., 586.
Prom the foregoing authority we deduce the rule that, under the English common law, and consequently under our statute, which is merely declaratory thereof, one cannot commit the crime of larceny or robbery without a felonious intent, or, in other words, he cannot commit them by inadvertence or through ignorance. In the ease at bar the cattle belonged to the appellant; they had been taken from him under process of court; while his acts in regard to them may have been a flagrant cqntempt of court, we perceive no evidence of moral turpitude, or perhaps, to speak with greater exactness, of that felon-
Section 1256 of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903 has no application to the case a.t bar. That section, in so far as applicable here, is as follows: “If any person unlawfully, but. not’ with felonious intention, take, carry away, defhce, destroy or injure any property, real or personal, or other tiling of value not his Own,
For these reasons the judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.