State v. Davis
State v. Davis
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The two questions to be decided are, whether the facts found amount to felony in point of law—and if they do, whether they are set forth in the indictment in a sufficient manner to warrant the Court in pronouncing judgment against the prisoner?
1. The finding of the jury fixes upon the prisoner all the essential circumstances to constitute a felony, and excepts this case from the operation of the principle relied upon in his behalf. It not only comes within the reason of the ex
The reason why felony cannot be committed in taking treasure trove waifs, or estray is, that the owner is unknown; the first, becoming the property of the finder, if no owner appears; no property in the second vesting before seisure, nor in estrays until the expiration of the year from the time of appraisement—and in these, it is always understood, that the owner is unknown to the person who takes them up. The rule applies, also, to finding a purse in the highway, which a person takes and carries away,—it is no felony, although the usual proofs of a felonious intent follow the act. “ If one lose his goods and another find them, though he convert them animo. furandi to his own use, yet it is no larceny, for the first taking is lawful.”-3 Inst. 107. But, in all these cases, the person taking the property must really believe it to be lost, for if he do not, and take it with the intent to steal, he will not be excused by the pretext of finding, otherwise every felony would be so excused. This is expressly laid down in Hale and other writers. If a man’s horse, is grazing at large on his neighbor’s ground, and it be taken with a felonious intent, the crime is complete. In shorty this principle will be found to pervade all these cases, and ascertains every taking to be a felony, if the intent be such, provided there was no reasonable cause for believing that the thing was lost.
2. But judgment cannot be pronounced on this indictment, because it lays the negro as the property of John Murrell,
Reference
- Status
- Published