State v. Lane

200 S.W.2d 72, 355 Mo. 1182, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 530
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1947
DocketNo. 40008.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 200 S.W.2d 72 (State v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lane, 200 S.W.2d 72, 355 Mo. 1182, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 530 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

LEEDY, J.

Appellant and two women, Lillian Inman and Alice Akes, were charged by information in the Circuit Court of Butler County with grand larceny, in having, on or about Feb. 8, 1945, stolen $900.00 in money from Sanford Mills. The cause was continued from term to term until May 3, 1946, when the state dismissed the ease as to the women, and Lane was placed upon his trial. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of two years, with the recommendation that he be paroled. The court, declining to follow this recommendation, sentenced defendant to the imprisonment specified in the verdict, and he appeals.

The principal question is whether the court erred in failing to direct a verdict of not guilty, as requested by defendant. Mills, who had filed the complaint, did not testify, but the state called the two women as witnesses, and relied on their testimony to establish the main facts of the case. From their testimony it appears that Mills (who was usually referred to by them as “the old gentleman”, or “the old man” — his age was fixed by one as “around sixty”) was a *1184 stranger to them, and. in the community; that they were seated in a tavern in Poplar Bluff on the night in question, as members of a group which, in addition to themselves, consisted of the defendant, and another man and woman; that Mills came into the tavern, and although a total stranger, “just bumped into” the group, bought a round or so of drinks, and attached himself to the party. It was then about closing time for the tavern, and defendant suggested that they “go and dance somewhere, and have some drinks”; a cab was called, and the six persons got in; they stopped at a liquor store where a quart or a fifth of whiskey was purchased, after which the other man and woman were taken to a certain address, and discharged as passengers, and the cab proceeded to a cabin on Highway 67, with Lillian and defendant riding in the front seat with the driver, and Alice and Mills in the back seat.

Enroute the “old man said something about shooting craps” or “being a crap shooter”, and defendant said, “Well, I shoot craps, too, so we will have a crap game.” The cabin was across the road from a place known as “Hill Top” or “Hillcrest”. Beaching the cabin, the men drank some of the whiskey, and engaged in a crap game, and consumed more during the course of the game. The women were in the same room, but did not take part in the game. They testified that first one would roll the dice, then the other — they shot some on the bed, and some on the floor, on their knees, and the bets, or money changed hands. They did not undertake to say how much, but they saw bills of different denominations, 5’s, 10’s, and 20’s— five or six of them. Finally, defendant won all the money, and “the old man got kind of sore, .1 guess. He said it wasn’t fair, or he had cheated, or something.” Lillian’s version was that the old man then went into the front room for a moment, and defendant went in there, too^ — the door remained open. They did not stay in there; he came right back out, and then went out the side door grumbling, and or saying he had been cheated, and that is the last they saw of him. Both women denied they got any part of the old man’s money. Alice testified similarly, but she alone was asked specifically if she had seen “Olin rob this fellow, take any money off of him,” to which she replied, “No, sir,” but related that defendant won some money .in the crap game; that Mills did not say “anything about being robbed, or anything like that,” but that “he sorta got peeved before he left and went out . ¡ . he was grumbling about not being fair or something to that effect, or he didn’t like it, the way things were going.” This witness did not remember the old man going into the front room, but said he might have done so while she was in the rest room.

They were at the cabin perhaps an hour and a half, and after Mills left, and as'soon as they could get a taxi, they returned to a restaurant in town where defendant made the statement to the women *1185 to the effect that “if anything come np, or anything, I won this money gambling.” Mills filed his complaint against the defendant and the women on February 9, on which day defendant was are-rested. When questioned by the arresting officers, defendant first denied having been at the cabin, but after being “confronted with the evidence he admitted that he went out to the cabin and gambled with this fellow Mills.” A search of his person revealed he had about $60.00 in currency, including one $20.00 bill, and others of smaller denominations. Under questioning by the officers, he stated he had won between fifty and one hundred dollars from Mills in the crap game. He also admitted buying the whiskey and paying for the cabin. As accounting for the failure of Mills to testify, it was shown by the sheriff that he had not seen Mills since the preliminary, but had tried, without success, to locate him in Indiana; and in that connection he testified Mills had a son “who lives down here by the Lone Star church.”

Testifying in his own behalf, defendant admitted shooting craps with Mills, and said he won between 50 and 100 dollars. He further testified that Mills had suggested the crap game, and that each of them had his own dice. He denied that he had taken any money off the person, of Mills, or had stolen any of his money, and he had not heard Mills express any dissatisfaction about the game, except he couldn’t win. On cross-examination he admitted having paid a fine for gambling within the last year.

In his brief, the Attorney General, with commendable frankness, concedes that upon a reading of the record the theory upon which the defendant was found guilty is not entirely clear, and with this conclusion we are in accord. A circumstantial evidence' instruction was given (over defendant’s objection), and among other things, it told the jury, “The state in this case seeks to convict the defendant of the crime charged on circumstantial evidence; that is, there is no evidence by any witness that saw the offense charged in the information committed.” In any view that may be taken of the proof we are unable to discover therein the essential elements of the crime of larceny. The element of trespass is expressly negatived. It is hornbook law that larceny always involves a trespass; a taking against the will of the owner. State v. Harris, 336 Mo. 1134, 82 S. W. 2d 877. “It is not larceny when the owner, in delivering the possession, intends also, at the same time, to confer the right of property, for any reason which he considers sufficient at the time. Where the right of property has once vested with the consent of the owner, there is evidently no unlawful taking of any kind.” Kelley’s Criminal Law and Procedure, 3d Ed., sec. 654, p. 614. See, also, State v. Anglin (Mo.), 222 S. W. 776 (prosecuting witness matching coins with strangers, betting on the result); State v. Buck, 186 Mo. 15, 84 S. W. 951. Moreover, the rule is that “One who ob *1186 tains the chattel or money of another by means of a game of chance, however fraudulently operated, is not guilty of larceny if the owner of the property, believing himsielf to have lost the wager, voluntarily pays or consents to the payment or delivery of the stakes to the supposed winner, for in such a case the title to the money passed notwithstanding the fraud by which, the transfer was induced.” 36 C. J. sec. 147, p. 779.

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293 S.W.2d 313 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W.2d 72, 355 Mo. 1182, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-mo-1947.