State v. Williamson

1 Houston 155
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 5, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Houston 155 (State v. Williamson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Williamson, 1 Houston 155 (Del. Ct. App. 1864).

Opinion

At this term John R. Williamson was indicted *Page 156 and tried for the crime of larceny in stealing a one hundred dollar bank note of the goods and chattels of Richard Mitchell.

Mitchell testified that on Tuesday of the week in which he lost the note, lie came from Smyrna to Dover and received from the Farmers' Bank here on a check to his order for the sum of two hundred and sixty-two dollars and a few cents, (the number of which he mentioned,) two bank notes of the denomination of $100 each, another bank note of the denomination of $50, another bank note of the denomination of $10, another bank note of the denomination of $2, and the few cents mentioned in fractional currency and nickel pennies, and folded the two one hundred and fifty and ten dollar bank notes together and placed them by themselves in his pocket-book, but put the two dollar bank note in another apartment of it, and the fractional notes and pennies with some other change less than a dollar which he before had in his pocket, and returned the same day to Smyrna; and that he did not receive any other money whatever from that time until the following Saturday when he missed one of the notes of the denomination of $100 from his pocket-book, but had in the meantime paid a small bill of not more than one dollar out of the $2 bank note, and had used the balance of it and the fractional currency before mentioned in paying some small expenses incurred in the meanwhile. That being indebted to the prisoner in the sum of $2, he stepped into his store in Smyrna on Thursday evening following his return from Dover, after the lamps had been lighted in it, and said to him that he would then pay him the $2 bill he owed him, and took from his pocket-book what he intended and supposed to be the ten dollar bank note folded with the other three bank notes as before mentioned, and handed it to the prisoner who took it and looked at it in a way which led him to apologize for offering a ten dollar note in payment of so small a bill, and that he then went to his money drawer and *Page 157 opening and looking into it and still retaining the note in his hand, said he could not make the change, but he would go into the store of his neighbor adjoining his and get the note changed, and immediately went out of his store and soon afterwards came back into it and handed him eight dollars in bank notes as his change for it, which he placed in the same apartment of his pocket book with the other three bank notes, and from which he had taken the bank note he handed to him; but he had no occasion to look at it or to use any of it until the following Saturday, when to his great surprise he found on again opening that apartment of his pocket-book, it contained but one bank note of the denomination of $100, one of the denomination of $50, one of the denomination of $10, and the $8 in bank notes which the prisoner had given him in change as before stated, and that instead of the $10 note being gone from it, as lie supposed and confidently expected to find, that note was still in it, and one of the two one hundred dollar notes was gone from it. It immediately occurred to his mind how it had happened, and he went to the store of the prisoner and stated to him that he had by mistake on the Thursday preceding handed him a one hundred dollar, instead of a ten dollar bank note, in paying his bill of two dollars that evening, and stated to him his reasons as already mentioned for the confidence with which he believed and alleged it. But the prisoner at once replied that the note which he received from him on that occasion was a ten dollar note, and that lie gave him eight dollars, the correct amount in exchange for it, and that then and ever since he had persistently denied all knowledge of any one hundred dollar note in connection with the transaction.

The person from whom the prisoner said he procured the change that evening, was also examined as a witness for the State, but he could not remember whether he changed a note for the prisoner, or loaned him the amount of money he required for the occasion, as was *Page 158 sometimes done by him under such circumstances; but he remembered that he did one or the other at his request. He positively denied, however, that he had any knowledge whatever of the hundred dollar note in question, or that he saw any one hundred dollar note in the hands of the prisoner that evening.

No testimony was produced on the part of the prisoner, except as to his good character. The prisoner, John R. Williamson, stood indicted for the crime of larceny, and which was alleged in the indictment to consist of his feloniously stealing, taking and carrying away a bank note of the denomination and value of one hundred dollars, the property of Richard Mitchell, with the intent to appropriate the same to his own use, without his consent, as the rightful owner of it. As the prosecuting witness in the case he had fully and particularly detailed all the facts and circumstances attending the first receipt of it by him with four other bank notes at the Farmers' Bank in Dover, how much in all he received, the denomination of the several bank notes, two of them being one hundred dollar notes, one of them a fifty dollar note, one of them a ten dollar note, and one of them a two dollar bank note, how he folded the four notes first mentioned together and placed them by themselves in one of the pockets, or apartments of his pocket book on the Tuesday he received them at the bank, and that he had no occasion, according to his statement, to examine them, or to use either of them, until the following Thursday evening when he went to *Page 162 the store of the prisoner after the lamps were lighted in it, to pay him a bill of two dollars which he owed him, and having in the mean time spent a portion of the two dollar note which he had received with them from the bank, but which had never been placed with them in his pocket book, and not having sufficient change about him to pay it, he told him he had called to pay it, and then took out of his pocket book, and from the apartment of it in which the four notes folded together had been kept in the mean while separate and apart and unexamined by him, what he intended and supposed to be the one ten dollar note which was folded with the others, and handed it to the prisoner who took it, held it in his hand and looked at it long enough to lead him to apologize for handing him a ten dollar note in payment of so small a bill; and that the prisoner then took it to his money drawer and opening and looking into it, said to him that he could not make the change, but he would go to the store of his adjoining neighbor and get it changed, and that he stepped out of his store, and in a few minutes returned and handed him eight dollars in several bank notes, (the number and denominations of which he stated) which he then placed in the same apartment of his pocket book from which he had taken the ten dollar note, as he supposed, which he handed to the prisoner, with the remaining three notes which he had replaced in it after handing the one he had taken from it to the prisoner. That he then left the prisoner's store, and again had no occasion to use or examine any of the notes in that apartment of his pocket book until the following Saturday, when to his surprise he discovered that the ten dollar note was still in it, but one of the two one hundred dollar notes was missing, and with the one hundred dollar note, the fifty dollar note and the ten dollar note still remaining in it, lie found the eight dollars in small notes which he had received in change from the prisoner, also in it. And he had stated with great precision and minuteness how he was able, as soon as he discovered it, to account

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Bluebook (online)
1 Houston 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williamson-delsuperct-1864.