Campbell v. State
Campbell v. State
Opinion of the Court
H. E. Patrick, it appears from the evidence, was the foreman of a gang of laborers in the employ of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. On pay day he went to the pay car of said company for the purpose of drawing his ówn pay and also the pay due to the laborers belonging to his gang. The defendant was a member of the gang, and the railroad company owed him something over $5, and he, along with the other members of the gang, accompanied Patrick to the car. It appears to have been the custom of the railroad company, from data furnished to it before each pay day, to have already prepared and in readiness on each pay day, for each gang of laborers, a list or pay roll, showing the name of the foreman and of each member of the gang, with the amount due each man set out opposite to his name, and the money was paid to each man to whom it was due in the following way: A clerk would call the name of each man as his
On the day in question the above custom was pursued, and when Patrick’s name was called the money due him, $78, was counted out on the counter. Pat- ■ rick, about the time the money was placed on the counter, turned to sign the pay roll, and the paymaster turned his head away, and when Patrick turned around after signing the pay roll the money was gone. The defendant had taken the money from the counter and had disappeared. A few moments' afterwards he was found by Patrick and the money taken from him. Patrick took the money and the defendant back to the paymaster. The money was again counted by the paymaster and then handed or paid to Patrick.
The defendant was indicted for the larceny of the money, and in the indictment it is alleged that the money was the property of Patrick, and the defendant claims that there was a fatal variance between the allegations and the proof, in that the evidence showed that both the title and the possession of the money were in the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. It is contended by the defendant that as Patrick had “not, in fact, placed his hands upon the money or finished his signature to the pay roll when the money was taken from the counter, therefore neither the title to nor the possession of the money had passed from the railroad company to Patrick.
When the paymaster segregated the $78 from the rest of the money of the railroad company, he did it for the
“Possession” means, simply, the owning or having a thing in one’s power; it may be actual, or it may be constructive. “Actual possession” of a chattel exists when the thing is in the actual manual custody of the party; “constructive possession” is that which exists in contemplation of law without actual custody.—Brown v. Volkening, 64 N. Y. 76; Foust v. Territory of Oklahoma, 8 Okl. 548, 58 Pac. 728.
The parts of the oral charge of the court to which the defendant reserved exceptions were in accordance with the above views. There is no error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.