The defendant, James Clifton Adcock, was indicted for knowingly transporting a stolen automobile in interstate commerce in violation of Section 408, Title 18 U.S.C.A. The jury returned a verdict of guilty and the matter is before the Court on the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The defendant had been employed for a number of months by the Briggs Motor Company as manager of its used-car lot in Portsmouth, Virginia. Following a disagreement with Briggs in the latter part of October 1941 he was released from employment and paid in full on a Saturday afternoon. The next day he called Briggs on the phone and asked permission to use one of the automobiles for the purpose of going to Suffolk, Virginia, to collect some of his personal belongings. The permission was given and Adcock took the car in question and drove it. to Suffolk. He tried to locate his former wife from whom he had been recently divorced but was not able to find her. He took a few drinks and decided to keep on riding and to seek employment at some Army camp in another section of the country. He drove the car on into North Carolina and from there through South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee and into Kentucky. While in Tennessee he acquired some secondhand Tennessee license plates and installed them on the care in place of the Virginia license plates which he removed. He was arrested in Kentucky for using the car as a taxicab without a license. He abandoned the car in Kentucky and proceeded into New York state. At the close of the Government’s case, which showed the foregoing facts, the defendant moved for a directed verdict on the ground that the evidence was not sufficient to show that the car was a stolen car within the provisions of the statute. The motion was overruled, which ruling is the basis for the present motion.
Section 408, Title 18 U.S.C.A. provides: “Whoever shall transport or cause to be transported in interstate or foreign commerce a motor vehicle, knowing the same to have been stolen, shall be punished by a fine of not more than $5,000, or by imprisonment of not more than five years, or both.” Defendant contends that where a bailee obtains possession of property without fraudulent intent at the time and later uses the property in violation of the terms of the bailment, the property so used is not stolen property; that the felonious intent to appropriate property to one’s own use must exist at the time of obtaining possession of the property in order to make the property stolen property. He relies upon Smith v. Commonwealth,
The foregoing construction of the meaning of the word “stolen” is supported by comparing the other case relied upon by defendant and referred to above, namely, McKenzie v. Travelers’ Fire Ins. Co., with the case of Federal Ins. Co. v. Hiter,
Since the evidence was sufficient to sustain a finding that the automobile had become a stolen automobile instead of one rightfully in the possession of the defendant, at a time before it was transported into Kentucky, and that the defendant knew that he was operating a stolen car the offense was sufficiently proven and the defendant’s motion for a new trial is accordingly overruled.
