Starkey v. State
Starkey v. State
Opinion of the Court
An information was filed in the probate court on the-7th of April, 1856, charging the defendant, Starkey, with stealing a. bank-bill of the denomination and value of five dollars. Not guilty was pleaded, and the trial of the issue, submitted to the-judge of the court, who found defendant guilty, and also found the value of the property stolen to be $4.50, and assessed a fine of $20-against the defendant, and ordered him to pay the costs, and to restore twofold of the amount stolen.
The probate judge signed a bill of exceptions tendered by the-defendant; from which it appears that on the 3d of March, 1856, the defendant stole a bank-note of the denomination of five dollars, issued by the Interior Bank of Georgia, and not made payable at any bank within this state; and that the felonious taking of said note was the cause of his arrest, and of the filing of the information against him.
It is claimed by the defendant that he was wrongfully found, guilty of the larceny imputed to him, and that he should have a writ of error to reverse the proceedings of *the probate judge. [268 He assumes that a person is not guilty of larceny in its legal sense, unless the thing stolen has gome actual legal value. This proposition is undoubtedly true, and does not seem to have been disputed by the court which tried the case; yet it was found that the stolen property was of value. We are referred, in support of the application, to the act to prohibit the circulation of foreign bank-bills of a less denomination than ten dollars, passed May 1, 1854. Swan’s Stat. of 1854, p. 116.
The second section of this act provides: 11 That all bank-bills of a. less denomination than ten dollars, unless issued by, and made payable at one of the banks of this state, in accordance with the laws-of this state, shall not, directly or indirectly, be paid out or received in payment of any tax, debt, judgment, decree, fine, or amercement, or other demand whatever; and all such unlawful paper shall beheld in this 'state to be worthless; and all contracts in relation thereto null and void; and any disbursements, or payments, or exchange for other property of value, made, or attempted to be made therewith, of no effect whatever.”
If the effect of this section be to divest foreign bank-bills of their-value, within this state, and to remove entirely from them, as property, all protection of the law, then it must follow that depredations-against the owners of them must go unpunished. Such, however,.
The writ is denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Aaron Starkey v. The State of Ohio
- Status
- Published