State v. Labbitt

156 P.2d 163, 117 Mont. 26, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 36
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1945
Docket8536
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 156 P.2d 163 (State v. Labbitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Labbitt, 156 P.2d 163, 117 Mont. 26, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 36 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ADAIR

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny, sentenced to two years in the state prison and here appeals from the judgment of conviction.

At the conclusion of all the evidence in the ease, the defendant made a motion for the court to direct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty because of the utter failure of proof of any felonious intent on the part of defendant to steal, i. e. to permanently deprive the owner of her property. The trial *28 court denied the motion and such ruling is the sole error assigned on this appeal.

The defendant, L. H. Labbitt, a physician and surgeon, owns and operates a building in Hardin, Montana, known as the Labbitt Apartments. Except for the fijont suite of six rooms wherein defendant maintains .his medical office, the entire building consists of apartments occupied by various tenants.

Defendant rented the apartment adjoining his office to Miss Edna Tobias at the agreed rental of $20 per month. The means of reaching this apartment from the street was through the waiting room of defendant’s office. The occupancy of Miss Tobias began in September 1941 and continued to April 1943. During the latter part of March 1943, Miss Tobias advised defendant that she contemplated leaving for the state of Indiana because of the illness of her father who resided there.

At this time, Miss Tobias was in arrears with her rent and defendant rendered her a statement of account wherein he claimed that she owed him $80 for four months rent and also $10 for professional services, making a total of $90. Miss Tobias disputed $30 of the bill rendered claiming; she owed defendant only $60 for three months rent and she wrote a check payable to defendant for the latter amount, writing thereon “Payment in full,” and placed same under defendant’s office door. The defendant declined to accept the $60 cheek as settlement in full of the account and promptly returned the check to Miss Tobias uneashed. Thus the rent remained unpaid and it was still unpaid at the time of defendant’s trial in December, 1943.

On Friday, March 26, 1943, Miss Tobias left Hardin by bus, of which fact the defendant became advised but he did not know where she had gone nor when she would return. Thereupon defendant sought the advice of an attorney-at-law respecting his rights as a creditor and was advised to hold the personal belongings left by the tenant in the apartment until the rent was paid. Following this advice the defendant removed from the apartment two fully packed suit eases found *29 just inside the door, a small table radio and a portable typewriter. These articles the defendant placed in a room adjoining the apartment from which they were removed.

It developed that Miss Tobias had gone to Billings, Montana, for the week-end and on Sunday evening, March 28th, she returned to Hardin. Upon entering her apartment she immediately discovered that her luggage, radio and typewriter were gone but she neither reported their loss to her landlord nor did she make any inquiry of him concerning the matter.

The following noon, March 29th, as Miss Tobias was leaving her apartment she saw, through a partly open door of the room adjoining her apartment, what appeared to be her luggage but she did not enter the room nor did she make any inquiry of her landlord concerning same. Instead, she proceeded immediately to the office of the county attorney with whom she talked the matter over but she left his office with the request that no action be taken until she gave further thought to the affair. Concerning this visit to the county attorney, Miss Tobias testified: “When I talked this over with the county attorney — I just don’t recall how it came in, but I got somehow or other in the county attorney’s office, that he (defendant) had asked someone if it would be all right for him to go into my apartment 'and take my belongings; and the fact that he (defendant) had asked a question like that, also made me feel that he (defendant) must have tried it.”

On Tuesday afternoon, March 30th, Miss Tobias made a second trip to the county attorney’s office at which time she swore to a complaint charging the defendant with the crime of burglary, following which a warrant was issued for defendant’s arrest. The arrest was made by the undersheriff who testified: “I Avent over Avith the Avarrant, and Doctor Labbitt Avas busy right at the time, for a minute or two before he came out.” The officer then asked the doctor if he had Miss Tobias’ property, and the latter freely and frankly admitted that he had the property, at the same time delivering same to the nndersheriff saying: “Here it is.” The property was still *30 in the room adjoining the apartment of Miss Tobias and, according to the testimony of the officer, it could be seen when the door was open. The property was removed to the sheriff’s office and remained there for about an hour when the undersheriff delivered all of it to Miss Tobias at her apartment.

What became of the complaint charging burglary the record fails to disclose. However, by an information filed April 3, 1943, the county attorney accused the defendant of the crime of grand larceny, charging that on or about the 28th day of March, A. D. 1943, he “did willfully, wrongfully, unlawfully and feloniously take from the possession of one Edna Tobias, the true oivner thereof, the following described personal property, to-wit: 1 trunk suit case, 1 suit case, 1 Remington Portable typewriter, 1 Radio, Clothing consisting of ladies’ dresses and ladies’ shoes, which is of the value of $225.00, with the intent in him, the said L. H. Labbitt, to then and there deprive and defraud the said true owner of her said property, and of the use and benefit thereof.’’

The record shows that in operating his apartment house the defendant personally attends to the ordinary upkeep, repair and janitor work of the building; that in this connection he has a pass key for all apartments; that on various occasions he had used the pass key to unlock the door of Miss Tobias’ apartment during her absence when repairing water faucets, oven doors, windows, etc.; that at the time defendant removed the articles from the apartment he used his pass key to gain admittance and that the removal occurred without the knowledge, consent or authority of Miss Tobias. The clothing mentioned in the information was simply that contained in the two suit cases which had theretofore been fully packed by Miss Tobias in readiness for her contemplated trip to Indiana.

The attorney on whose advice the luggage, radio and typewriter were held testified that when the defendant consulted him defendant said “he (defendant) understood Miss Tobias was about to leave this community permanently and asked *31 what he (defendant) could do to protect himself on the rent that he said she owed him, and at that time I told him I would advise holding whatever personal belongings she had in this apartment until she paid the rent. ’ ’

Defendant testified:

“Q. Now I will ask you, Doctor: Why did you take this property? A. Because she was indebted to me, and was threatening to move out, and I had no other recourse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P.2d 163, 117 Mont. 26, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-labbitt-mont-1945.