Lead Opinion
Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Franklin County (Main, Jr., J.), rendered August 11, 2014, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of grand larceny in the third degree.
The facts of this case are largely uncontested. In August 2013, defendant, a landlord, noticed that tools had gone missing from a garage that he had previously permitted a tenant and the tenant’s friends to use. Thereafter, defendant removed the tenant’s 2003 Suzuki all-terrain vehicle (hereinafter the ATV) from the garage and stored it at the house of a friend. Upon the tenant’s realization that defendant had taken the ATV, he contacted law enforcement authorities, which eventually led to defendant’s arrest and his indictment based on a single count of grand larceny in the third degree. After a jury trial, defendant was convicted as charged. He appeals,
We agree with defendant that the evidence was legally insufficient to support the verdict. Larcenous intent is the “intent to deprive another of property or to appropriate the same to himself or to a third person” (Penal Law § 155.05 [1]; see People v Medina, 18 NY3d 98, 103 [2011]). The terms “deprive” and “appropriate” are both essential to larcenous intent and refer to a purpose “to exert permanent or virtually permanent control over the property taken, or to cause permanent or virtually permanent loss to the owner of the possession and use thereof” (People v Medina, 18 NY3d at 105 [internal quotation marks, emphasis and citation omitted]). For this reason, “[t]he mens rea element of larceny is simply not satisfied by an intent to temporarily take property without the owner’s permission” (Matter of Shawn V., 4 AD3d 369, 370 [2004]; see People v Medina, 18 NY3d at 104; People v Jennings, 69 NY2d 103, 119 [1986] ).
. This Court has been informed that, during the pendency of this appeal, defendant was deported.
. Thus, the People’s contention that they did not have to prove that defendant intended to permanently appropriate the ATV or permanently deprive the tenant of it is incorrect as a matter of law.
. The fact that this would have been an objectively unreasonable plan if defendant were incorrect in his belief that the tenant had or could acquire the tools — a point which the People emphasized during summation — is ir-revelant, as mens rea refers to defendant’s mental state rather than the mental state of an objectively reasonable hypothetical defendant.
Concurrence Opinion
concur. Ordered that the judgment is reversed, on the law, and indictment dismissed.
