State v. Enanno

114 A. 886, 96 Conn. 420
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 114 A. 886 (State v. Enanno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Enanno, 114 A. 886, 96 Conn. 420 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Gager, J.

The defendants were jointly charged with the crimes of theft from the person and an attempt to commit the crime of theft from the person, and were convicted by a jury upon both counts. They then filed a motion to have the verdict set aside as against the evidence, which was denied; whereupon a request for a finding was made, and an appeal for errors in the charge was taken. An appeal was also taken from the denial of the motion to set the verdiqt aside, but this was abandoned upon argument.

At least five of the reasons of appeal are based upon a claimed error of the court in its instruction to the jury in its definition of the crime of theft. Upon this point the court charged as follows: “Theft or larceny is the *422 wrongful or fraudulent taking by any person of the personal goods or property of another from any place, with intent to convert them to the taker’s own use; that is, to make the goods or property his own without the consent of the owner. The intent must be to deprive the owner permanently of his property by appropriating it to the use of the taker. ”

The first count contained the language “feloniously did steal”; the second count, “did . . . feloniously attempt to steal. ” The appellants complain that the court nowhere told the jury that the accused should not be convicted unless they took the money in question with a felonious intent, and that this failure constituted harmful error, and that this error affected both counts. The real grievance of the appellants, as expressed in their argument, seems to be that the court did not incorporate the very word “felonious” in its explanation of the crime charged. There was no error in omitting the use of this particular word. We doubt if its use would have given the jury any additional light upon the nature of the act charged. It is true that the word is incorporated in many definitions of “theft”; for instance, Swift defines “theft” as “the wrongful taking and carrying away the personal goods of another from his possession, with a felonious intent to convert them to the use of the offender without the consent of the owner.” 2 Swift’s Digest, p. 309. On the other hand, Wharton, in his Criminal Law (11th Ed.) Vol. 2, § 1095, after reviewing various definitions, says: “Larceny may be defined to be the fraudulent taking and carrying away of a thing without claim of right with the intention of converting it to a use other than that of the owner without his consent.” The term “felonious” always requires further definition to be of any use to a jury. 2 Wharton, Criminal Law (11th Ed.) § 1094. As long ago as 1796, Judge Swiet, in his System, Vol. 2, pp. 384, 385, quoted *423 with approval by Chief Justice Andrews in State v. Setter, 57 Conn. 461, 466, 18 Atl. 783, said of the term “ felonious,” after referring to the use of the word in the English law: “Nor does it [felony] with precision comprehend any class or description of crimes. A word of such uncertain meaning ought to be banished from a code of laws; for nothing produces greater confusion and perplexity, than the use of terms to which no precise and clear idea can be affixed. . . . The word feloniously is used in indictments for all capital crimes, and for many not capital, as for theft; but as felonious in an indictment, can mean nothing more than criminal, and does not designate the nature or the class of the crime, it may be deemed unnecessary and immaterial, and ought to be exploded by our courts. ”

As we have seen, the term is still retained by many authors and judges as an essential part of the definition, but other definitions have been framed which omit the use of the word “felonious” and may be preferred as being clearer upon their face than those based on the use of the word “felonious.” See Wharton’s definition, supra.

Technically, however, the word “felonious” used in many definitions, some of which may be found collected in Bishop’s New Criminal Law, Vol. 2, §§ 758 and 759 and the note, serves to indicate the nature of the criminality of the act; and a good definition must in some way — either by the use of the word “felonious” properly explained, or by the substitute of the explanation itself, or some equivalent phrase — point out this criminal characteristic. The learned trial judge, apparently, was intending to follow the language of Parke, B., as cited in 2 Bishop, supra, note 8 to § 758, but inadvertently omitted the words which state the necessary criminal characteristic in the definition used. The words “without excuse or color of right” do not occur, and we *424 find nothing in the charge before us which supplies the omission of these words from the formal definition, while they are found in the definition as quoted from' Parke, B., although in Parke’s definition the word “felonious” is entirely omitted. “Felonious,” in the definition of theft, is held to mean the same as the words omitted from the charge before us, to wit, that there is no color of right or excuse for the act.

The appellants claim that under the definition as given, with the word “felonious” or its explanation, as stated above, omitted, the accused could have been convicted had the act in fact been simple conversion. The case required no very extended explanation of the idea contained in “felonious,” but we think, even without a request, the defendants were entitled to sufficient definiteness as to the nature of the criminality to remove all reasonable chances that the jury might fail to qatch the distinction between conversion and theft. The failure to incorporate this important element in the definition was error. °

The charge is also criticized for this passage: “The attorney for the State who opened this case brought to your attention the fact that where one person aids or assists another in any way in committing a crime, that that person so aiding and assisting, and called in the language of the law an accessory, may under our statute be prosecuted jointly with the other person connected with the alleged crime in the same way as if he or she had actually and physically committed the offense charged.”

The claim of error was made here, because the court was not specific in not negativing the possibility of innocent aid, and says that one could have been convicted under this charge on simple presence. We think this part of the case, based on the statute as to accessories, was not explained as it should have been. As *425 the charge is read, one gets the impression that this quotation is merely a passing reference to a matter brought to their attention by the State’s Attorney, requiring only an allusion. It was more than that; it was a definite and distinct ground of complaint against one, and possibly both, of the accused. The jury should have been told specifically what it was to be an accessory, what was necessary, and what kind of conduct must be shown to bring one who did not physically commit the crime under the same punishment as one who did. The words of the statute (§ 6716) are as follows: “Every person who shall assist, abet, counsel, cause, hire or command another to commit any offense may be prosecuted and punished as if he were the principal offender.”

The jury were not given the information that even a reading of the whole statute would have given them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Skinner v. State
843 So. 2d 820 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2002)
State v. Miranda
715 A.2d 680 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1998)
State v. Small
700 A.2d 617 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1997)
State v. Ali
660 A.2d 337 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1995)
Flanders v. Meachum
824 F. Supp. 290 (D. Connecticut, 1993)
Ford v. State
612 So. 2d 1317 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1992)
State v. Polanco
597 A.2d 830 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1991)
State v. Turner
587 A.2d 1050 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1991)
Thornton v. State
570 So. 2d 762 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1990)
State v. Foster
522 A.2d 277 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1987)
State v. Giannotti
510 A.2d 451 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1986)
State v. Green
480 A.2d 526 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1984)
State v. McCalpine
463 A.2d 545 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1983)
Magnon v. Glickman
440 A.2d 909 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1981)
State v. Cannon
440 A.2d 927 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1981)
State v. Maresca
377 A.2d 1330 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1977)
State v. Battle
365 A.2d 1100 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1976)
State v. Teart
365 A.2d 1200 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1976)
Whiddon v. State
299 So. 2d 326 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1973)
State v. Anonymous
30 Conn. Supp. 553 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 886, 96 Conn. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-enanno-conn-1921.