Commonwealth v. Gober

35 Pa. D. & C.2d 709, 1964 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 256
CourtSchuylkill County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedDecember 14, 1964
Docketno. 477
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Pa. D. & C.2d 709 (Commonwealth v. Gober) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Schuylkill County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Gober, 35 Pa. D. & C.2d 709, 1964 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 256 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Staudenmeier, J.,

This matter is before us on defendant’s petition and rule to quash the information which sets forth: “That within the said county on the Mts. of Feb., March, April day of -A. D. 1964, a certain Robert P. Gober of 203. Schuylkill Ave., Shenandoah Hghts., Shenandoah, Penna. Did during the past and above Mentioned months, enter the home of Mrs. Alberta M. Gober of 10 N. Lehigh Ave., Shenandoah, Pa., did illegaly enter my home, and remove and put to use, for his own personal good, and use and convert to his own use the various goods he stole from my house, such as Radios, Hi. Fi. Set Bedding also a bed, Electric Sweeper, and also an itemized list of Personal Belongings. Amounting to over $1000.00 Dollars I am hereby charging him with Larceny of Personal Property. This is a Felony. Page 256, Sec; 807. Penna. Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure.”

The district attorney filed an answer to the petition.

The case appeared on the October 1964 argument list and was submitted on briefs to the court sitting en banc.

Defendant’s first contention is that the information should be quashed for the reason that under the law of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, a wife cannot arrest her husband for larceny.

It is true that under the common law rule there could be no theft by a husband of his wife’s property. There were two reasons for this common law rule, first at common law there was no separate right of property in a married woman, and second, “the merger of their beings in the unity of marriage.”

[711]*711Since the passage of the Married Women’s Property Acts, a wife has full property rights independent of her husband. A husband and wife have ceased to be one person in the contemplation of our statutory law: In re:Estate of Mary Vandergrift, 105 Pa. Superior Ct. 293, 297, 161 Atl. 898.

The Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 344, sec. 3 declared, inter alia, that a married woman may sue and be sued civilly with the same effect and results and consequences, as an unmarried person; she may sue her husband in a proceeding to protect and recover her separate property. The act accords the husband the same right: 48 PS §111.

One of the necessary elements of the crime of larceny is the felonious and fraudulent taking and carrying away of the personal property of another. Clearly since the passage of the Married Women’s Acts, the fiction of unity has been destroyed and the wife became “another.”

Hence we come to the question: Did the passage of the Married Women’s Property Acts, which give married women the right to own property and to sue and be sued with respect thereto, abrogate, without any corresponding change in the larceny law, the settled common law rule that there could be no theft by a husband of his wife’s property, since she could have, at common law, no separate property?

We have been unable to find any Pennsylvania decision-in point.

After extensive research we conclude that a husband may be convicted of the crime of larceny, for appropriating the separate property of his wife. This was the conclusion reached by the New York Court of Appeals in People v. Morton, 308 N. Y. 96, 123 N. E. 2d 790, 791 (1954), wherein the court said:

“The larceny statutes, old and new, penalize, in varying verbiage, the wrongful taking of the property [712]*712of another. Before the Married Women’s Acts, the existing larceny laws were inapplicable to a husband’s taking of his wife’s chattels, but only because such chattels did not belong to ‘another’ but, under the old fictions, belonged to the husband himself. So, when the wife became ‘another’, the larceny statutes without necessity of amendment covered her losses as well as those of any other lawful owner of property. We cannot, at this late date, discover the actual legislative intent, if any, nor can we refuse to apply an old plain statute to a new plain fact within the statute’s coverage.”

Defendant in his brief after pointing out that no Pennsylvania cases have been found suggesting that the foregoing common law rule has been abrogated, cites an early Pennsylvania case, Walker v. Reamy, 36 Pa. 410, (1860), wherein the court by way of dictum has suggested that the Act of April 11, 1848, should not be interpreted as modifying the common law rule. The Act of April 11, 1848, P. L. 536, declares that a single woman’s property shall continue hers “as fully after marriage as before,” and that property acquired by a married woman “shall be owned, used and enjoyed by her as her own separate property;” and in neither case shall it be subject to levy and execution for the debts of her husband, or to being transferred or encumbered by him without her consent.

It will be immediately noted that the Act of 1848 is not nearly as broad in its scope and far-reaching as the Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 344, supra.

The Supreme Court in discussing the 1848 Act stated at page 414:

“A little reflection will make it quite obvious that the terms here used will not bear to be taken in their largest signification. They are, in fact, limited in the law itself in several important particulars, one of which is, that her husband, on her death, shall have his courtesy, [713]*713whether she will or not. And as the only object of the act was to afford a protection to the estates of married women, we may assume that it was not intended that she should so ‘fully’ own her ‘separate property’ as to impair the intimacy and unity of the marriage relation. It was not intended to declare that her property should be so separate that her husband could be guilty of larceny of it, or liable in trespass or trover for breaking a dish or a chair, or using it without her consent. It was not intended, by allowing her to own her property ‘as fully after marriage as before,’ that he should not sit at her table, or use her furniture or house, without her consent specially given, or that she might have an action of assumpsit against him for use and occupation of her house, or for the use of her carriage, or for boarding at her expense, or that she may obtain a divorce, a mensa et thoro, by an action of ejectment. It was not intended that her property should be so separately hers that she might invest her funds in cattle, or ships, or notions, or menageries, or wagons, without his consent, and turn drover, or shipmaster, or common carrier, or travelling showman, or pedlar. The unity of the marriage relation forbids this, and our common sense saves us from such an interpretation of the law.”

Counsel for defendant further points out that a wife may not testify against her husband in a criminal proceeding and consequently her testimony before the justice of the peace was a nullity and the return of the information should not have been made.

The information merely discloses that the wife appeared as the prosecutrix: nothing appears on same to indicate that she was a witness. Moreover, there is a marked distinction between competency as a prosecutor and competency as a witness on the trial of the cause in court: Commonwealth v. Geary, 9 Pa. C. C. 60; Commonwealth v. Vance, 29 Pa. C. C. 257; Commonwealth v. Barr, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 609.

[714]*714Counsel further contends that inasmuch as the wife has a perfectly legitimate civil remedy which she can pursue, there was no necessity for this criminal action.

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Related

Commonwealth Ex Rel. Lieberman v. Smith, Warden
30 A.2d 625 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Commonwealth v. Hopkins
69 A.2d 423 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Commonwealth v. Gallagher
69 A.2d 432 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
In Re Estate of Mary Vandergrift
161 A. 898 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
People v. Morton
123 N.E.2d 790 (New York Court of Appeals, 1954)
Walker v. Reamy
36 Pa. 410 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1860)
Commonwealth v. Barr
25 Pa. Super. 609 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)
Commonwealth v. Robertson
47 Pa. Super. 472 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)
Commonwealth v. Miller
77 Pa. Super. 469 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Pa. D. & C.2d 709, 1964 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gober-paqtrsessschuyl-1964.