State v. Marshall

220 N.W. 106, 206 Iowa 373
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 26, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 106 (State v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Marshall, 220 N.W. 106, 206 Iowa 373 (iowa 1928).

Opinions

Albert, J.

Numerous errors are assigned herein, thé first arising from certain instructions offered by the defendant, which were refused by the court, to the point that larceny was an included offense finder the charge here made against the defendant, and should have been submitted to the jury.

Under Section 13919, Code of 1927, the jury is given the power to find the defendant not guilty of the degree'charged in the indictment, and guilty of any degree inferior thereto or of an attempt to commit the offense.

Section 13920 reads as follows:

“In all other eases, the defendant may be found guilty of any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which he is charged in the indictment.”

*375 As to just what is an “included offense,” the authorities seem fairly clear.

Every crime charged consists of certain specific elements, and if, from the elements of the crime charged, certain elements thereof may be taken, thereby leaving the necessary elements of another crime, the latter would be an included offense. Or, to state it in another way, ^ certain elements are necessary to a criminal ekarge> and these elements, plus certain other elements, make the necessary elements of a higher crime, then the lower crime is included in the higher one- To illustrate: Certain elements are necessary to a simple assault. If, in addition to these elements, the evidence shows the completed assault, then we have an assault and battery, because assault is necessarily included in a charge of assault and battery. On the other hand, if to the elements of assault is added an intent to do great bodily injury, we have a higher crime, which necessarily includes assault. So with assault with intent to commit manslaughter, or with intent to commit murder. Each of these charges is included in an assault, and this is equally true of murder in éither degree, or manslaughter. Or, to state it in still another way, where the minor offense is necessarily an elementary part of the greater, then the minor offense is included in the greater.

In our own cases we have held that assault is included in a charge of assault and battery (Dixon v. State, 3 Iowa 416; State v. Graham, 51 Iowa 72) ; that it is included in an assault with intent to do great bodily injury (State v. Schele, 52 Iowa 608); also in assault with intent to-commit manslaughter (State v. Smith, 100 Iowa 1); that it is included in an assault with intent to do great bodily injury (State v. Shaver, 197 Iowa 1028); in an assault with intent to commit murder (State v. Walker, 133 Iowa 489). Assault and battery are not necessarily included in assault with intent to commit rape, because the element of battery is not necessary to the charge. State v. McAvoy, 73 Iowa 557; State v. Roby, 194 Iowa 1032. Yet, if the indictment charges battery, it is included. State v. Kyne, 86 Iowa 616; State v. Perkins, 171 Iowa 1.

We have held that in a charge of robbery, assault is included (State v. Becker, 159 Iowa 72), as well as an assault *376 to rob (State v. Duffy, 124 Iowa 705) ; also, that larceny is included in a charge of robbery (State v. Mikesell, 70 Iowa 176; State v. Reasby, 100 Iowa 231; State v. Taylor, 140 Iowa 470) ; also, that a charge of robbery includes larceny from the person (Stale v. Taylor, supra). These cases, with many, others in our courts, are illustrative of the rule above suggested.

If we turn tó the instant case for application of the rules above suggested, the defendant is charged with larceny from the person, and the question is whether the court should have submitted to the jury the requested instruction of the defendant on the crime of larceny. In other words,' is larceny necessarily included in a crime of larceny from the person? To our minds, there can be but one answer to this question. Before the higher crime can be proven, every element of a charge of larceny must be proven, to which must be added proof that the property is taken from the person of the prosecuting witness, to make the higher charge. If the taking of the property of the prosecuting witness is shown to havé been in fact a larceny, though it was not taken from the person, then there is no reason why the defendant could not be convicted of "larceny, under a charge of larceny from the person. We "held;'in State v. Mike-sell, supra, .that the crime off larceny" from a building necessarily includes the crime of larceny, and that, under. a charge. of larceny from a building in the nighttime, a conviction of simple larceny might be sustained. See, also, State v. Nordman, 101 Iowa 446.

In the case, of State v. Gleason, 56 Iowa 203, we had a case where the defendant had been convicted of larceny before a j ustice of the peace, and based on the same act, he was subsequently indicted for larceny from the person. We there held that his conviction for the larceny was good, as a plea of former conviction. See, also, State v. Sampson, 157 Iowa 257.

In State v. Clem, 49 Wash. 273 (94 Pac. 1079), the charge Avas that" of larceny from the person. The court submitted the included offense of larceny, and the jury convicted-of the latter offense. Defendant appealed, on the ground that assault was not an included offense. That court said:

“To feloniously take from the person of another the goods of that other and carry the same aAvay has always been "a crime, punishable as" either grand or petit larceny. Therefore, when *377 the legislature' defined and made punishable the specific act of feloniously taking property from the person, it did not create a new offense; it but recognized that there were degrees in larceny, some of which were deserving of more severe punishment than others, and sought to regulate the punishment in proportion to the offense. Larceny from the person, grand larceny, and petit larceny are for this reason but different degrees of the same crime, and are- properly included in an information charging the higher offense; and being so, it is, of course, proper for the jury, on an information charging the higher offense, to find the accused guilty of any one of the lesser offenses that the facts proven will warrant.”

See, also, State v. Steifel, 106 Mo. 129 (17 S. W. 227), and 31 Corpus Juris 867.

We conclude, therefore, that, under a charge of larceny from the person, simple larceny is necessarily included.

This, of course, is all subject to the further rule that the evidence must justify the submission of the included offense. That is to say, even under the charge, if there is no evidence from which the jury could find the defendant guilty of the included offense, then such included offense need not be submitted. State v. Kyne, supra; State v. Hutchinson, 95 Iowa 566; State v. Trusty, 118 Iowa 498; State v. Egbert, 125 Iowa 443; State v.

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 106, 206 Iowa 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marshall-iowa-1928.