Clines v. Commonwealth

298 S.W. 1107, 221 Ky. 461, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 753
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 1107 (Clines v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clines v. Commonwealth, 298 S.W. 1107, 221 Ky. 461, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 753 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing

The appellants, Brady Clines and Walter G-aines, were jointly indicted with Freely Allen by the grand jury of Allen county in which they were accused of the offense of grand larceny, the stolen property being a check for $30.00, alleged to be the property of one Paul Costelow. The appellants were tried separately from the defendant Allen, and they were convicted and punished by confinement for 1 year each in the penitentiary. Their motion for a new trial was overruled, and they have appealed. The only grounds argued for reversal which we regard as of sufficient materiality to require our consideration are (1) insufficiency of the indictment, and error of the court in overruling the demurrer filed thereto, and (2) error of the court in overruling appellants’ motion for a directed verdict of acquittal because of insufficiency of the evidence to authorize their conviction.

'Ground (1) presents two qestions, which are: (a) Whether a check is a proper subject of larceny; and if so, then (b), -whether the indictment in this case sufficiently described it. It is well settled that, at common law, the stealing of a chose in action did not constitute larceny. The text in 36 C. J. 743, par. 26, thus states that principle of the common law:

“ Bonds, bills, and notes and other written instruments promising or directing the payment of *463 money, were not subjects of larceny at common law, for the technical reason that such instruments were only evidence of a right, and a mere right was not such a thing as could be stolen. ’ ’

And on page 737 of the same volume, par. 8, it is said:

“The fourth and last requisite (of the crime of larceny) is that the thing of which the owner is deprived should have corporeal existence; that is, be something the physical presence, quantity, or quality of which is detectable or measurable by the senses or by some mechanical contrivance; for a naked right existing merely in contemplation of law, although it may be very valuable to the person who is entitled to exercise it, is not a subject of larceny; nor, at common law, was the document or record by which this right was evidenced; but under statutes such documents and records are now generally the subject of larceny.”

The same volume on the first page mentioned (743, par. 27) says:

“The rule that instruments evidencing pecuniary obligations are not subjects of larceny has been almost entirely abrogated by statutes which have been enacted in the United States, England, and Canada.”

To the same effect is the text of 17 R. C. L. page 29, par. 33, and standard text-writers announce the same rule, there being no judicial utterance to the contrary. The only statute we have in any wise modifying the common-law rule is section 1161, Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, which says:

“Eobbery or larceny of obligations, bonds, deeds, wills, bills obligatory, or bills of exchange promissory notes for the payment of money, paper bills of credit, certificates of deposit of many with any bank or other person, or certificates or obligations granted by the authority of this commonwealth, that of the United States, or any of them, or of account books or receipts, shall be felony; and any person guilty of such felony shall be punished by con *464 finement in the penientiary for not less than two nor more than ten years.”

It will be observed that the statute does not, in terms, mention checks as a subject of larceny, but it does specify, as such subjects, obligations and ¡bills of exchange, as well as certificates of deposit with any bank or person. Whether a check might be classified as an “obligation,” or be included in any of the other specified choses contained in the statute, we need not determine, since we are ■convinced that after the enactment in 1904 of our Statutes, commonly known as the Negotiable Instruments Act (now chapter 90b of the 1922 edition of Carroll’s Statutes), the word “bills of exchange” contained in section 1161 include checks drawn by a depositor on a person with whom the deposit is made. Section 3720b-185, which is a part of the Negotiable Instruments Act, says that:

“A check is a bill of exchange drawn on a bank payable on demand.”

We therefore conclude that our statute (section 1161) enlarging the common law so as to include the theft of choses in action, as aided by the definition contained in the Negotiable Instruments Act, makes it larceny to steal a check, and the demurrer to the indictment on this ground was properly overruled.

In considering and determining subdivision (b) of ground (1), i. e., the insufficient description of the check in the indictment, it will be necessary to set forth so much of the indictment as relates to the question. Following the accusatory part of the indictment, its descriptive part is couched in this language:

“The said 'Clines, Allen, and Gaines heretofore, to-wit, on the ■ — ■ day-, A. D. 192......, and before the finding of this indictment in the county aforesaid, did unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously take, steal, and carry away one check for the sum of $30.00, same being the property of Paul Costelow, with the felonious intent to then and there convert the same to their own use and to permanently deprive the said Paul Costelow of the possession thereof and the property therein. Said check being the personal property of Paul Costelow, and being property of value and of a greater value than $20.00.”

*465 It will be observed that the indictment as so drawn contains no description whatever of the alleged stolen check. It gives no date, no drawer, no drawee, nor any pa>ee. It is true that it states that it was the personal property of Costelow, but how it ever became such is not alleged. Whether it was issued directly to him as payee, or whether he became the owner as indorsee or by delivery nowhere appears. In other words, there is absolutely no effort to describe, in the faintest way, the check alleged to have been stolen by the defendants in the indictment. It is a general as well as an infallible rule of erim ■ inal procedure that an indictment should be sufficiently explicit, including description of property stolen under the charge of larceny, to advise the accused with reasonable certainty of the accusation he is called upon to meet at the trial, arid to enable him to rely on the judgment thereunder in bar of a subsequent prosecution for the same offense. The text in 36 C. J. 813, par 268, so states that rule; and on page 820, par. 283, same volume, with reference to the description of a check when it is the property stolen under statutes making it the subject of larceny, it is said that:

“Indictments for the larceny of checks have been held to be bad unless the particulars of the instrument were stated, or a copy of it was set forth. ’ ’

In other words, unless the check was copied in hreo verba in the indictment, it should be sufficiently described so as to clearly identify and distinguish it, and so that one prosecution would be a bar to another one based upon the same facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 1107, 221 Ky. 461, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clines-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1927.