State v. Mancino

102 N.W.2d 504, 257 Minn. 580, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 564
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 14, 1960
Docket37,733
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 102 N.W.2d 504 (State v. Mancino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mancino, 102 N.W.2d 504, 257 Minn. 580, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 564 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Dell, Chief Justice.

Upon an information by the county attorney of Hennepin County, defendant, James Mancino, was tried and convicted of grand larceny in the first degree. The information in part specified the following:

*582 “The said James Mancino on or about the 21st day of November, A. D. 1957, at the City of Minneapolis in said Hennepin County, Minnesota, then and there being, did wilfully, unlawfully, wrongfully, knowingly and feloniously, take, steal and carry away from the possession of Munsingwear, Inc., a corporation * * * four hundred sixteen shirts (416) described as to quantity, style and value as follows, to-wit:

“[Description of the shirts by number, style, and value.]

“all of the total and aggregate value of Two Thousand, Two Hundred Thirty Five and 02/100 Dollars ($2,235.02), * * * with intent * * * to deprive the said Munsingwear, Inc., a corporation * * * of its said property, and to appropriate the same to the use of * * * said James Mancino, contrary to the statute * *

The trial court’s charge to the jury included the following:

“I am only going to read to you the portions of the statutes that apply to the particular charge that is made against this defendant. * * *

2j« # * # >{*

“ ‘Sec. 622.01. * * * Every person who, with intent to deprive or defraud thé true owner of his property * * * or to appropriate the same to the use of the taker, or of any other person:

“ ‘Shall take from the possession of the true owner, or of any other person, * * * or appropriate to his own use, or that of any person other than the true owner, money, personal property * * * or article of value of any kind—

‘Steals such property, and shall be guilty of larceny.’ [Italics supplied.]

* * * * *

“ ‘Every person who shall steal or unlawfully obtain or appropriate in any manner specified in this chapter [M. S. A. 622.05]:

“ ‘Property of the value of more than $500 in any manner whatsoever—

“ ‘Shall be guilty of grand larceny in the first degree.’

*****

*583 ' “The essential elements of grand larceny as charged against this defendant are that property in excess of $500 in value was taken from the possession of the Munsingwear Company and that even though the defendant was not present when the property was physically taken from the Munsingwear building, that the defendant participated in the theft by assisting in its transportation out of the county and also by disposing of it and selling a part of it to Walter Engle, at Rockford, Minnesota, and that all of this was done with the intent in the mind of the defendant to appropriate said property to his own use and to deprive the true owner of that property.

* *.}: » * *

“It is necessary in order that you find the defendant guilty that the State shall prove that certain property of more than $500 value was taken from the Munsingwear building, and that it was taken with the intention on the part of the takers, including this defendant, to deprive the Munsingwear Company of its property and to appropriate it to the use of this defendant or some other persons.”

Subsequently, the jury returned for further instructions, and the following took place:

“The Foreman: * * * We are in doubt about your instructions as to whether to consider for our verdict on what is actually in the Information or on all sections that you stated, whether these sections apply or not to our consideration of the verdict.”

The court thereupon reread the instructions above set forth, and then the following took place:

The court: “Does that help? Any further questions?

“The Foreman: I have no further questions.

“Mr. Williams [counsel for defendant]: I would like the record to show the objection to the charge as originally given and the objection to be further noted that the Court took particular sections of the charge out of context when the whole charge should be reread based on the general question put by the jury.”

From the judgment subsequently entered, this appeal is taken. Upon appeal defendant claims error in the trial in that:

*584 (1) Under the information filed, which charged that defendant did “steal and carry away” certain property, the state was not authorized to prove that he had committed grand larceny in some other statutory manner;

(2) The evidence fails to support a finding that he took the goods from Munsingwear, Inc., or aided or abetted or procured someone else to do so; or that he took or received such stolen goods in Hennepin County and transported them to Wright County;

(3 ) The court erred—

(a) in restricting defendant’s cross-examination of Ralph W. Lange, employee of a private investigator employed by Munsingwear, Inc.;

(b) in referring to an endorsement on a certain check as that of defendant when there had been no testimony to such effect;

(c) in stating “And your man was in with him” in referring to a statement by defendant’s counsel that a witness had admitted taking a large stock of merchandise from Munsingwear, Inc.

The evidence submitted indicates the following: On December 31, 1957, Munsingwear, Inc., discovered that about $30,000 worth of merchandise, mostly shirts, had disappeared from its warehouse in Minneapolis. Fred H. Huddleson, who was employed by Munsing-wear during the time when this merchandise disappeared, later confessed that he had removed part of it from the Munsingwear warehouse. At defendant’s trial he testified that in September or October of 1957 he met- defendant and Marland Pettis, another Munsingwear employee, and rode with them from Minneapolis to Rockford in Wright County in a 1957 station wagon which belonged to Pettis; that he then observed a large carton in this car and in defendant’s presence asked Pettis what was in it; that he was then advised by Pettis that “there was stuff from Munsingwear”; that when they arrived at Rockford defendant took the carton into a beer tavern there while he and Pettis remained in the car; that defendant stayed inside about 15 or 20 minutes and then returned to the car without the carton; that he next saw defendant and Pettis about Christmas of 1957 when defendant had asked him what he had told the police department and the *585 Busch Detective Agency about the carton and had warned him that if he “said anything about this stuff” at Rockford “they would get even” and would say that he had helped them remove this and other merchandise from the Munsingwear plant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 N.W.2d 504, 257 Minn. 580, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mancino-minn-1960.