La Vaul v. State

40 Ala. 44
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 Ala. 44 (La Vaul v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Vaul v. State, 40 Ala. 44 (Ala. 1866).

Opinion

JUDGE, J.

The indictment in this case is in the usual form for the larceny of a mule, averred to be “over the value of one hundred dollars. ” The only evidence as to the larceny was, that the mule had been stolen in the State of Tennessee, and was found in the possession of the prisoner in the county of Madison, shortly after the offense had been committed. Section 3138 of the Code provides, that this offense shall be punished in the same manner, and to the same extent, as if the property thus brought into, had been stolen in the State; and the main question to be determined is, whether the prisoner should not have been indicted under the statute, instead of for grand larceny as at common law.

It was decided in England, at an early period, that where goods, seized piratically on the ocean, were carried by the thief into a county in England, the common-law judges would not take cognizance of the larceny; “because,” said they, “ the original act, namely, the taking of them, was not any offense whereof the common law taketh knowledge; and, by consequence, the bringing of them into a county could not make the same felony punishable by our law.” Butler’s case, cited in 13 Co. 53; 3 Inst. 113. And this doctrine has been applied, in England, both to goods stolen in other parts of the king’s dominions, and to goods stolen in foreign countries.-1 Bishop’s Cr. Law, § 105, and cases there cited. See, also, Leading Cr. Cases, 224.

So far as respected goods stolen in Scotland, this inconvenience in the law was remedied by the statute of 13th Geo. 3, ch. 31.—Simmons v. Commonwealth, 5 Binney, 617. The reason for the distinction between such a case, [46]*46and stolen goods carried from one county into another in the same state or kingdom, is thus stated by Teates, J., in the case last cited: “In the latter instance, general laws pervade the whole government, and prescribe penalties on distinct offenses. The autre fois convict in one county, may be pleaded in bar-to another prosecution for the same offense in another county. But not so as between distinct and independent states governed by different laws.”

Upon this doctrine of the common law, there has been a contrariety of decision in the American courts; some of the States applying the English doctrine, and others discarding it. — See Bishop’s Cr. Law,§ 108, for the cases. And some, if not most of the States, now have statutes remedying the defect or inconvenience in the common law, above stated.

As early as 1807, Alabama being then under a territorial government, the legislature provided for the punishment of the offense of stealing horses, or other goods and chattels, “ from any person in any place out of the territory,” and afterwards having the same in possession within the territory ; any person thus offending, it was provided, might be “indicted for horse-stealing, or other larceny,” in whatever county he might be found with the stolen property in possession.—Aiken’s Digest, 120, § 30. The first case reported as having occurred under this territorial statute, which afterwards became the law of the State, is The State v. Seay, 3 Stewart, 123. In that case, the indictment was framed under the statute, notwithstanding the phraseology of the act, that the person offending might “ be indicted for horse-stealing or other larceny.” The offense was regarded by the court as' one of statutory creation; the principal question raised and relied on by the prisoner was, that the act creating the offense was unconstitutional; and the judgment of the court was reversed, because the indictment did not charge that the possession of the property in this State was felonious.

Subsequently, (in 1841,) a penal°code for the State was adopted, the 18th section of the 4th chapter of which was as follows : Every one who shall inveigle, steal, carry, or entice away any slave, with the view to convert such slave [47]*47to Ms own use, or the use of any other person, or to enable such slave to reach some other State or country, where such slave may enjoy freedom, such person shall, on conviction, be punished by confinement in the penitentiary, not less than ten years.” — Clay’s Digest, 419. By the 57th section of the same chapter of that code, it was provided that the offense of grand larceny should be punished “ by imprisonment in the penitentiary, not less than two, nor exceeding five years”; (Clay’s Digest, 425;) and by the 25th section it was provided, that “ every person who shall fraudulently, or feloniously, steal the property of another in any other State or country, and shall bring the same within this State, may be convicted and punished in the same manner as if such larceny had been committed in this State; and in every such case, such larceny may be charged to have been committed in any county in or through wMch such stolen property may have been brought.” — Olay’s Digest, 420.

The cases of Williams v. The State, (15 Ala. 259,) Ham v. The State, (17 Ala. 188,) and Murray v. The State, (18 Ala. 727,) were decided under the influence of the statutes last above mentioned. In each of these cases, all relating to the larceny of slaves, it was held, that the indictment should be framed under the 18th section of the penal code, and not under the 25th section. It was not proper to indict, as at common law, for the offense of grand larceny, because the stealing of a slave had been made a statutory offense by the 18th section, with a Mgher penalty than was prescribed for the offense of grand larceny. “It may, however, be argued”, says Dargan, C. J., in Murray v. The State, (supra,) “ that the indictment might be framed under the 25th section, and the prisoner convicted of grand larceny, and receive the same punishment that would be awarded upon the conviction of this offense. The answer to tMs argument must be, that the prisoner then would not suffer the same punishment as he would if the original larceny had been committed in this State, and if it had been, he could only be indicted under the 18th section, and could be punished only by or in accordance with its provisions. He therefore must be punished as he would have been had the original larceny been committed in Alabama; [48]*48and to do this, he must be indicted under the 18th section.”

There is a difference in the language between the 25th section of the old penal code and section 8138 of our present code. The person offending, under the latter, is not to be convicted in the same manner as if the property had been stolen in this State, as is the provision in the 25th section of the former; but, he is to be convicted of the offense as defined by the statute.—The State v. Ward, 6 New Hamp. 529. The language of the old code would seem to imply that there was a necessity, while it was in force, for proceeding in the same maimer — that is, under the same statute— as if the offense had been committed in this State.

We feel constrained to hold that the indictment in the present case should have been framed under section 3138 of the Code, which is introductive of an offense not known to the common law. Williams v. The State, Ham v. The State, and Murray v. The State, (supra,) do not militate against the correctness of this conclusion, which is strengthened, as has been correctly contended in the argument for the prisoner, by a reference to other sections of the Code.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ala. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-vaul-v-state-ala-1866.