People v. Hoban

88 N.E. 806, 240 Ill. 303
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 N.E. 806 (People v. Hoban) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hoban, 88 N.E. 806, 240 Ill. 303 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

On November 22, 1907, an information was filed in the municipal court of Chicago whereby that court was informed that the plaintiff in error, D. W. Hoban, on said day “did unlawfully steal, take and carry away, with intent to steal, some forty stamped envelopes, valued at one dollar ($1), property of the Barrett Manufacturing Company, a corporation organized under the laws of West Virginia.” The next day the defendant was arraigned and pleaded not guilty. On November 30, 1907, an assistant State’s attorney appeared for the prosecution, and the court, for some reason not disclosed by the record, appointed Edmond W. Pottle to assist the State’s attorney in the prosecution. The court heard the evidence and argument of counsel and continued the cause to December 6, 1907, when it was stricken from the docket on motion of the State’s attorney, with leave to re-instate. The defendant not being satisfied with that order, which left the cause undisposed of, moved to have it re-instated, which was done on December 28, 1907. On January 3, 1908, the court, upon considering the evidence heard on November 30, 1907, found the defendant guilty and sentenced him to pay a fine of $25 and costs taxed at $14, and committed him to the county jail of Cook county and thence to the house of correction until the fine and costs should be paid in money or by labor. The defendant gave a stay bond under a practice obtaining in that court and removed the cause to the Appellate Court for the First District. The branch of the Appellate Court affirmed the judgment, and the writ of error in this case was sued out to review the judgment of the Appellate Court.

The following facts were proved at the trial: The defendant, who was twenty-five years old, engaged in his first business venture on July x, 1907, as manager of the Illinois Paper Stock Company, of which he was president and his wife secretary. The business of that corporation was ¡the purchase of all kinds of paper scrap and cuttings and waste paper, and a sale of the same to paper mills for paper stock. The paper so bought was graded into eight or ten different grades and shipped to the paper mills to be remade into paper. Among other concerns from which scrap and waste paper were purchased was Buckley, Dement & Co., who packed the paper in crates of about five hundred pounds each and delivered about two or three crates a month, for which they received thirty cents a hundred pounds. The defendant’s corporation had from twelye to twenty girls employed in sorting the paper into the different grades, and one of them brought forty or fifty envelopes from the sorting room to the defendant’s desk and said, “We found these in the waste paper.” The envelopes were not in a package but were loose, as they had been picked out of the waste paper, and were cheap advertising envelopes, having a United States two cent stamp impressed in the paper in the usual place,. and on the upper left-hand corner were printed the words “Barrett Manufacturing Co., Chicago.—Barrett’s Brands standard everywhere.—B on every roll.” They were worth two and one-eighteenth cents each to the Barrett Manufacturing Company and were worth nothing to anyone else except the redemption value of the stamps. The defendant put the envelopes in his desk and used a few of them in sending bills or receipts when he was short of stamps. A. M. Smith, the advertising agent for the Barrett Manufacturing Company, identified three envelopes which had been so used, and. the advertising manager swore out a search warrant for the remaining envelopes, and when he called, with an officer, upon the defendant he asked the defendant if he had the envelopes, who replied that he had. He made no attempt to conceal them, but gave them up freely and explained where they were found, and no search warrant was needed to obtain them. The Barrett Manufacturing Company was in the habit of having envelopes printed in lots of 15,000 to 30,-000 at a time, by a printer- named Miller, and sent the envelopes, when printed, in lots of 14,000 to 15,000 at a time, to Buckley, Dement & Co., a firm engaged in the addressing or circular business, to be addressed to different persons. The only manner in which the envelopes in question could have g'ot into the waste paper was by a few of the great number being dropped in the work of addressing and gathered up with, the other waste paper. After the attorneys? had concluded the evidence on both sides the court recalled? the defendant and gave him an examination, in which the defendant said that he knew it was not the intention of any party to sell stamped envelopes at thirty cents a hundred; that he never heard of the Barrett Manufacturing Company; that he inferred some printer who had printed them had thrown them irito the waste paper, and if they were sent to the Barrett Manufacturing Company it would react on the printer; that he did not know that two cent stamped envelopes were redeemed by the government, and that he thoughtJ:he_ envelopes had been thrown away.

Larceny, as defined by the statute, is the felonious stealing, taking and carrying, leading, riding or driving away the personal goods of another, and every larceny, under that statute, includes a trespass tqjhejjqssession. There can be no larceny without a trespass, and there can be no trespass unless the property was in.the possession of the one from whom it is charged to have been stolen. (Bishop on Crim. Law, secs. 808, 828.) The information charged larceny of the envelopes from the Barrett Manufacturing /Company, and the fact was that they were part of a crate of scrap and waste paper sold by Buckley, Dement & Co. to the corporation of which the defendant was manager. To sustain the finding that defendant was guilty of larceny as charged in the information, which included a trespass to the possession of the Barrett Manufacturing Company, counsel~für the People say that the said company delivered 14,000 or 15,000 envelopes at a time to Buckley, Dement & Co. to be addressed and returned; that this constituted a bailment and the lawful possession passed to Buckley, Dement & Co.; that when Buckley, Dement & Co. undertook to return the envelopes to the Barrett Manufacturing Company the bailment ended, and if forty envelopes had been dropped in the waste paper, Buckley, Dement & Co. retained only the custody of those envelopes and not the possession of them; that when Buckley, Dement & Co. sold the waste paper to defendant’s corporation, the custody, and not the possession, of the forty envelopes passed to that corporation; that the delivery to defendant’s corporation and the delivery to the defendant by the girl was not a taking or aytrespass, but that when the defendant used a few of the envelopes it constituted a taking from the jpossession of the Barrett Manufacturing "Company and a larceny of the envelopes. By contending that Buckley, Dement & Co. did not have the possession, and that the defendant occupied the same position as that company and took the envelopes from the possession of the Barrett Manufacturing Company, an attempt is made to avoid the rule that no one in the lawful possession of goods can commit a larceny of them. (Johnson v. People, 113 Ill. 99.) The argument must fail for want of evidence to justify it, if there were no other reason. There is no evidence from which it can be said that the bailment -was ended. The envelopes were in the waste paper and had probably been dropped there in some way, either through negligence of Buckley, Dement & Co., for which they would be liable, or as a usual and ordinary incident in doing the work of addressing with ordinary care.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.E. 806, 240 Ill. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hoban-ill-1909.