People v. Stone
People v. Stone
Opinion of the Court
Field, C. J. and Cope, J. concurring.
In this case, the defendant was convicted of larceny, the offense charged being the felonious taking of a wagon and team. It was
It is not necessary to go into this matter, for it is clear that the defendant was entitled to offer any legal proof showing the intent or conducing to show the intent with which he took the property, or showing whose property it was, or the general or particular title to it; and this proffered evidence did have that tendency. Its sufficiency is a question for the jury. We do not see why the jury in the Court of Sessions could not as well try the question of fact, whether this indebtedness has been paid, as a jury of the District Court.
For this error, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Let the remittitur issue immediately.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE v. STONE
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- 14 cases
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- Syllabus
- Defendant owed B., and to secure the debt, made a bill of sale to him of a wagon and team, and delivered possession. Bill of sale absolute on its face; but there was an agreement between defendant and B., that B. should keep the property until the profits thereof had paid him about $1,000, or until he had been otherwise paid, when the property was to be delivered back to defendant. After this, L., a teamster of B., was directed by him to drive a horse and mule of the team in a vragon to a mill in the neighborhood. L. drove the team to Sacramento, instead of the mill. Creditors of defendant there levy on the wagon and animals. Defendant is indicted for larceny; and, after proof on the trial seeking to connect him with driving the team to Sacramento, and its seizure there, he offered to go into a statement of accounts between himself and B., to show that the debt to B. had been paid before L. took the property. Buled out, on the ground that this matter “must be settled in another Court: ” Held, that the Court erred; that the facts sought to be introduced were competent, as tending to explain the transaction, and show the intent with which defendant took the property, or as showing whose property it was, or the general or particular title to it; that all the facts connected with the title and the taking, should go to the jury, who can try the question whether the indebtedness had been paid. Larceny is compounded of the taking and carrying away and the felonious intent. Whatever has a legal tendency to show the intent, is proper evidence. A mortgagee, in possession of personal property, has such a title that a felonious taking of the property by the mortgagor would be larceny. A man may steal his own property, if, by taking it, his intent be to charge a bailee with the property, and thus impose a loss on him.