State v. Campbell

536 P.2d 105, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 329
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1975
Docket2294
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 536 P.2d 105 (State v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Campbell, 536 P.2d 105, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 329 (Ala. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

Thomas H. Campbell was accused of having violated AS 11.20.260 which provides that one who finds lost property and appropriates it to his own use without either advertising his discovery in a paper of general circulation or notifying the police officer nearest to the place of the finding is guilty of larceny. An indictment was returned on June 11, 1974 charging the defendant with “wilfully, unlawfully and fe-loniously” finding and retaining certain specified items of personal property — silver *106 painted aluminum cans containing .22 caliber target ammunition, an ASAHI Pentax 300 mm. telephoto lens and Bushnell 7 x 35 power “sportcaster” binoculars — valued at more than $100.00 without taking either of the steps prescribed by AS 11.20.260 to find the lawful owner. 1

On July 12, 1974, Campbell filed a motion in the superior court to dismiss the action on the ground that, insofar as the statute did not require proof of criminal intent and makes mere negligent conduct subject to the criminal penalties attaching to either grand or petit larceny set forth in AS 11.20.140, it was an unconstitutional denial of due process under the constitutions of the United States and Alaska. A hearing was held on July 18, 1974, and Judge Hepp granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss.

The sole issue raised on this appeal is whether the superior court erred in granting the defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment based upon the court’s conclusion that AS 11.20.260 2 does not require criminal intent for conviction and, therefore, constitutes a violation of due process of law guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment of the United States Constitution and art. I, § 7 of the Alaska Constitution.

The lower court’s invalidation of AS 11.-20.260 rested solely on our holding in Spei-del v. State. 3 That decision, in turn, was influenced by and to a great extent followed the United States Supreme Court’s opinion in Morissette v. United States. 4 *107 An analysis of these two cases is essential to a determination of the constitutional issue before us.

Morissette involved a defendant who, while hunting on a government bombing range, came across a large number of spent bomb casings which had been used by Air Force planes during practice drops at various ground targets. Once utilized, these casings had been dumped in heaps in areas out of the way of the targets, and some had been accumulating and rusting for as long as four years. Believing that these casings had been abandoned by the government, the defendant decided to salvage the scrap metal. In broad daylight and without any attempt to conceal his activities, the defendant loaded, crushed and carted away about three tons of this material.

Morissette was subsequently indicted for violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641 which provided that anyone who “embezzles, steals, purloins, or knowingly converts” government property would be punishable by fine and imprisonment. The trial court refused to allow the defendant to present a defense based on his lack of criminal intent since, at the time of the taking, he believed that the casings had been abandoned. The trial court, in fact, charged the jury that the necessary felonious intent was “presumed by his own act”.

The Supreme Court, in reversing the conviction, discussed the historical background of the requirement of wrongful intent for a finding of criminal culpability. The court stated:

The contention that an injury can amount to a crime only when inflicted by intention is no provincial or transient notion. It is as universal and persistent in mature systems of law as belief in freedom of the human will and a consequent ability and duty of the normal individual to choose between good and evil.
Crime, as a compound concept, generally constituted only from concurrence of an evil-meaning mind with an evildoing hand, was congenial to an intense individualism and took deep and early root in American soil. As the states codified the common law of crimes, even if their enactments were silent on the subject, their courts assumed that the omission did not signify disapproval of the principle but merely recognized that intent was so inherent in the idea of the offense that it required no statutory affirmation. Courts, with little hesitation or division, found an implication of the requirement as to offenses that were taken over from the common law. 5

Thus, the court held that, except in a narrow class of public welfare offenses in which strict liability would be tolerated, 6 proof of criminal intent would ordinarily be a necessary prerequisite to any criminal conviction.

Morissette also indicates an important corollary to this fundamental principle of *108 law; that is, wrongful intent when omitted from a statutory codification of a common law crime will be read into the statute as an implied requisite element. The government had argued that the Congressional silence as to the mental element of the offense described in 18 U.S.C. § 641 was indicative of its desire to do away with the intent requirement altogether. In light of the extensive body of common law relating to intent in theft offenses, the Supreme Court viewed the statutory silence differently.

Stealing, larceny, and its variants and equivalents, were among the earliest offenses known to the law that existed before legislation; . . . . State courts of last resort, on whom fall the heaviest burden of interpreting criminal law in this country, have consistently retained the requirement of intent in larceny-type offenses.
* * * * * *
Congress, therefore, omitted any express prescription of criminal intent from the enactment before us in the light of an unbroken course of judicial decision in all constituent states of the Union holding intent inherent in this class of offense, even when not expressed in a statute. Congressional silence as to mental elements in an Act merely adopting into federal statutory law a concept of crime already so well defined in common law and statutory interpretation by the states may warrant quite contrary inferences than the same silence in creating an offense new to general law, for whose definition the courts have no guidance except the Act. (emphasis added) 7

The court concluded that it could find “no grounds for inferring any affirmative instruction from Congress to eliminate intent from any offense with which this defendant was charged”. 8

The problem confronted in Speidel v.

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Bluebook (online)
536 P.2d 105, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-campbell-alaska-1975.