Higgins v. People

7 Lans. 110
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Lans. 110 (Higgins v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. People, 7 Lans. 110 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1872).

Opinion

Mullin, P. J.

The plaintiff in error was indicted in the Jefferson Sessions for robbery and for stealing from the person of one James Roseboom a wallet of the value of one dollar, twenty-five promissory notes (commonly called bank bills) of national currency, issued by divers banking associations, to the jurors unknown, but of the value in the aggregate of fifty-one dollars. A more particular description of said notes and bills was to the jurors unknown.

The jury found the prisoner guilty of larceny from the person, charged in the indictment, and not guilty of the robbery.

The court sentenced the prisoner to imprisonment in the State prison at Auburn, at hard labor, for the term of three years and eight months.

The prisoner brings up the record by writ of error.

The prisoner’s counsel requested the court to charge the jury that the offence, if any, was petit larceny, unless the jury can safely say, from the evidence, that the pocket-book or its contents were worth more than twenty-five dollars. The court refused so to charge; but did charge it. was immaterial how much it (the pocket-book) contained; that the uncontradicted evidence, as to the amount of money by Roseboom, was that the amount was fifty-one dollars.

Section 2 of choper 374 of the Laws of 1862 provides that whenever any larceny shall be committed by stealing, taking and conveying away from the person of another, the offender may be punished as for grand larceny, although the value of the property taken shall be less than twenty-five dollars.

It was held by the Court of Appeals in Williams v. The People (24 N. Y., 405) that the word “may,” in the foregoing section, is not imperative, but gives the court, in which the prisoner is convicted of stealing from the person less than [112]*112twenty-five dollars, the same degree of punishment that would be proper, in its estimation, to inflict had the conviction been for grand larceny.

It was also held in the same case that it was the right of the prisoner to have the jury instructed that they should find in their verdict the value of the property stolen, to the end that the court might have satisfactory evidence of value to guide them in the exercise of the discretion vested in them by this section.

The finding as to the value can be of no importance to the prisoner, unless there is proof in the case which might authorize the jury to find it to be less than twenty-five dollars. When all the evidence is that the value exceeds twenty-five dollars, the refusal to instruct could do him no possible injury.

The question, then, is whether there was any evidence in the case which could authorize the jury to find the value of the property stolen to be less than twenty-five dollars.

Roseboom, from whom the property is alleged to have been stolen, was the only witness as to the value, and he says the bills which he lost were in a pocket-book; counted it before leaving his shop at Dexter, about three o’clock p. m. He did not count it all, but he had fifty-four dollars and some change. Went to Watertown and did not see the money to count it again that day. He last saw it in the evening, just before leaving Water-town; he had it in his pocket-book, and took out the pocketbook at the Exchange Hotel, and paid for a cigar; the bills he claims to have lost were in the pocket-book then, but he did not look to see; he thought they were. After arriving at the hotel in Brownville, he paid a doctor ten cents for medicine from change he had in his pocket-book; it lay on the top of a $2 bill. He then observed the bills, put the pocket-book back into his pocket. Roseboom admitted he had been drinking during the afternoon after leaving Dexter, and before his money was taken. He had taken out his pocket-book in the hotel and was advised by one Hoover, who was with him, to put it back into his pocket. Hoover says he saw a lot of bills [113]*113in his pocket-book, and saw him put it in his pocket; this was just before it was stolen. Two witnesses on the part of the defence testify that Roseboom had out his pocket-book in the tavern just before the struggle in which he says it was stolen from him, when offering to bet about running.

The evidence of Roseboom is positive that he had in bills the amount he specified at three o’clock p. m. His pocket-book, with bills in it, was seen by him at Watertown early in the evening, and at Brownville a short time before the stealing.

If any fact can be said to be established, the possession of fifty-one dollars in bills by Roseboom, at the time of the taking, must be held to be proved.

It is possible that Roseboom may swear falsely; he may have been so intoxicated as not to know or accurately remember all that occurred; lie may have dropped from his pocketbook some of the bills while he had it out paying for articles purchased, or when offering to bet. If the proof would authorize the jury to find that part of the money was lost, it would also justify the finding that he had lost the whole, and there was none in the pocket-book when it was taken.

When it is shown that the money was in the pocket-book at three o’clock p. m., the presumption is that it remained there, unless the circumstances proved justify the inference that it was lost, and that inference cannot fairly be made in this case; on the contrary, the evidence of Roseboom strengthens the presumption that the money was still in the pocketbook.

The jury were justified in finding that the money in the pocket-book exceeded in value twenty-five dollars, and they could not find upon the evidence that the value was under twenty-five dollars.

The remark of the court in reply to the request to charge the proposition above stated, that it was immaterial how much the pocket-book contained, was erroneous as an abstract proposition, as is shown in the opinion of Denio, Ch. J., in Williams v. The People (supra), but the remark could not, as I have attempted to show, do any injury to the prisoner [114]*114as there was no evidence to authorize a finding that the property taken was worth less than twenty-five dollars.

To justify a conviction for larceny, it was incumbent on the public prosecutor to prove that property which by law might be the subject of larceny was unlawfully taken. At common law the felonious taking of choses in action was not larceny. (Arch. Crim. PL, 164.) The stealing of bills, &c., is made larceny by statute. To be the subject of larceny they, must be shown at least prima facie to be genuine, and, if made by a corporation of another State, prima facie evidence of its legal existence must be given. (The People v. Caryl, 12 Wend., 547; Johnson v. The People, 4 Den., 364.)

Bradley, J., was of the opinion that evidence that the prisoner had passed the bills as genuine would have been sufficient ;• so would evidence that bills of the same kind have been received and passed away in the ordinary course of business as a part of the business of the country.

In the case of Fallon v. The People (2 Keyes, 145), the money, alleged to be stolen consisted of four five-dollar bills on banks in the State, and one ten-dollar bill of the American Bank of Rhode Island, and had been received on the day of the larceny from W. Hinslee, of Tonawanda, in payment for work done for him by the witness from whom the money was stolen.

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Related

People v. Arnstein
28 N.Y. Crim. 165 (New York Court of General Session of the Peace, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Lans. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-people-nysupct-1872.