State v. Moore

264 S.E.2d 899, 46 N.C. App. 259, 1980 N.C. App. LEXIS 2830
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 15, 1980
Docket795SC1045
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 264 S.E.2d 899 (State v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Moore, 264 S.E.2d 899, 46 N.C. App. 259, 1980 N.C. App. LEXIS 2830 (N.C. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

VAUGHN, Judge.

The issue raised by this appeal is whether the evidence considered in a light most favorable to the State is sufficient to go to the jury and support the jury’s verdict. We hold that the motion to dismiss was properly denied by the trial court.

Defendant stands convicted of feloniously receiving stolen property, in violation of G.S. 14-71, which makes it unlawful to receive any property, the stealing or taking whereof amounts to larceny, knowing or having reasonable grounds to believe the same to have been stolen.

We will first consider whether the property involved in this case could be said to have been stolen by Mary Brown.

Larceny, according to the common law, has been defined as the felonious taking by trespass and carrying away by any person of the property of another without the latter’s consent and with the felonious intent permanently to deprive the owner of his property and to convert it to the taker’s own use. State v. McCrary, 263 N.C. 490, 139 S.E. 2d 739 (1964).

Some ancient cases held that lost goods were not the subject of larceny under any circumstances. As late as 1832, a member of our Supreme Court questioned whether lost as opposed to mislaid property was the subject of larceny. State v. Roper, 14 N.C. 473 (1832) (opinion of Henderson, C.J.). By way of contrast to Roper in State v. Farrow, 61 N.C. 161 (1867), the Court upheld defendant’s larceny convictión for taking a bucket of peas which the owner had “mislaid” by leaving it at a market on a cart he mistakenly thought to be that of a friend. Notwithstanding what was said in some of the earlier cases, however, the modern view in this jurisdiction as well as others is that casually lost property may be the subject of larceny as well as that which is mislaid. No distinction is now made between property “lost” and property “mislaid.” *262 See Annot. — Larceny by Finder of Property, 36 A.L.R. 372 (1925). Unquestionably, the money found by Mary Brown had been lost by the true owner. Even so, the law puts constructive possession of the property in the hands of the one who lost it until someone else takes actual possession thereof. See Riesman, Possession and the Law of Finders, 52 Harv. L. Rev. 1105, 1130-33 (1939).

Whether the person who finds and keeps lost property for his own use is guilty of larceny depends upon whether at the time he finds the property he knows or has reason to believe that he can ascertain the owner of the property. If at the time of finding, he knows or has reasonable means of knowing or ascertaining the owner, he is deemed guilty of larceny if he keeps the property with the intent to deprive the owner thereof. Thus, if the article found bears marks or other clues known to the finder as a ready means of identifying the owner, the finder will be guilty of larceny if he appropriates it to his own use. It is not necessary that the finder should know who the owner is, but he must have such means of inquiry on that subject as to give him reason to believe that, with reasonable effort on his part, the owner will be found.

2 Wharton’s Criminal Law and Procedure § 459 at 94 (1957). As another commentator has put it, there must be a “clue to ownership” before the taking by the finder can be a larceny. If under all of the circumstances the finder would have reason to believe the owner and his property could be brought together again, there is a “clue to ownership.” R. Perkins, Criminal Law 249-50 (1969). In this case, there were several “clues to ownership” of the lost property sufficient to cause the finder to know that the true owner and his property could probably be reunited. The name of the depository bank was clearly printed on the outside of the bag. Within were numerous checks made out to the drugstore which was near where the property was found. The amount of money and the location are also factors which give a clue of ownership. We are not dealing here with an unidentifiable small coin that could have been lost by anyone but with a large sum of money and checks payable to a business adjacent to the sidewalk on which it was found.

When Mary Brown did not attempt to find the owner, she was guilty of larceny if it was her present intent to deprive the owner of his lost property and convert it to her own use.

*263 In every instance there must be an original, felonious intent, general or special, at the time of the taking or finding of lost property, in the mind of the accused, to construe larceny. If such intent be present, no subsequent act or explanation can change the felonious character of the taking. If it be not present, it is only a trespass and cannot be made a felony by any subsequent misconduct or bad faith in the taker. “The omission to use the ordinary and well known means of discovering the owner of goods lost and found, raises a presumption of fraudulent intention, more or less strong against the finder, which it behooves him to explain and obviate; and this is most readily and naturally done by evidence that he endeavored to discover the owner, and kept the goods safely in his custody. . . .”

State v. Arkle, 116 N.C. 1017, 1031, 21 S.E. 408, 408 (1895); State v. England, 53 N.C. 399 (1961). The felonious intent in this case probably did arise but need not have arisen at the moment Mary Brown picked up the money bag. Where a closed receptacle, container or pocketbook is found and the contents are not known until later, a finder may be guilty of larceny if a felonious intent is formed as soon as the contents are discovered. See, e.g., State v. Hayes, 98 Iowa 619, 67 N.W. 673 (1896). It is not clear at what point the bag was first opened, whether it was at the bus stop, on the bus or at the hospital. The evidence is that Mary Brown did not return it to the owner but instead divided the money with her companions including defendant. “Intent being a mental attitude, it must ordinarily be proven, if proven at all, by circumstantial evidence, that is, by proving facts from which the fact sought to be proven may be inferred.” State v. Murdock, 225 N.C. 224, 226, 34 S.E. 2d 69, 70 (1945). The State has proven that the owner who could reasonably have been ascertained was not sought. The bag was found in front of the owner’s store, yet the finder boarded a bus and left the area. From all of the circumstances, a felonious intent can be inferred.

A similar case is State v. Holder, 188 N.C. 561, 125 S.E. 113 (1924), where tourists in our State inadvertently left a coat containing a pistol, pocketbook, traveler’s checks, and money at the side of a road where their car had been mired in mud. The defendants, who were brothers, and others had assisted the tourists in getting free of the mud. The coat was discovered by defend *264 ants after the tourists had left and the contents turned up when the pockets were searched. Defendants divided the articles, burned the checks and gave one Sam Grady a dollar to keep quiet. The tourists, discovering their loss, returned, and sought out the sheriff whose deputy obtained the coat from the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.E.2d 899, 46 N.C. App. 259, 1980 N.C. App. LEXIS 2830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moore-ncctapp-1980.