State v. Daniels
Decision Date | 31 July 1862 |
Citation | 32 Mo. 558 |
Parties | STATE, Respondent, v. JOHN DANIELS, Appellant. |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
Appeal from Greene Circuit Court.
Aikman Welch, attorney general, for the state.
I. The court committed no error in overruling defendant's motion to quash. The indictment is not bad for duplicity, since the stealing of several articles of property at the same time and place constitutes but one offence. (Lorton v. The State, 7 Mo. 55.)
II. It is not necessary, where horses are the subject of larceny, to allege any value, since to steal a horse of any value is grand larceny. (1 R. C. 1855, p. 575, § 25.) The indictment is therefore sufficient.
III. The court did not err in giving the instructions asked for on the part of the State, nor in refusing the instructions asked for by defendant. The instruction asked for by defendant did not correctly declare the law, nor was there any evidence upon which to base it.
The defendant was indicted in the Greene Circuit Court for feloniously stealing, taking and carrying away one mare and one gelding, the property of one Richard W. Bragg. A motion was made to quash the indictment, which being overruled, the defendant was tried, and the jury found him guilty and assessed his punishment at ten years in the penitentiary. The case is brought here by appeal. It is contended by the defendant that the indictment is defective in this: that it charges the defendant with having stolen a mare and gelding, and omits to state the value of the property alleged to have been taken. We see no force in either of the objections. In Lorton v. The State, 7 Mo. 55, this court held that the stealing of several articles of property at the same time and place constitutes but one offence. This is unquestionably the law. (See 3 Chitty's Criminal Law, 959.)
The other objection has no application to an indictment of this kind. As a general rule, an indictment for larceny should state the value of the property taken, in order that the record may show whether the charge is grand or petit larceny; but under our statute the stealing of a mare or gelding is made grand larceny without reference to value, and therefore it is not necessary to the validity of the indictment that the value should be stated.
This case will have to be remanded for error in the judgment of the court below. The penalty fixed by law for an offence of this kind is imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than ten years. The jury...
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...cited often in this State and in other jurisdictions on the point raised. Missouri cases stating the rule in the Lorton case are State v. Daniels, 32 Mo. 558; State v. O'Connell, 144 Mo. 387, 46 S.W. 175; State v. Maggard, 160 Mo. 469, 61 S.W. 184. For learned research upon the question ref......
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... ... increase or mitigate the nature of the offense." Lorton ... v. State has been cited often in this State and in other ... jurisdictions on the point raised. Missouri cases stating the ... rule in the Lorton case are State v. Daniels, 32 Mo ... 558; State v. O'Connell, 144 Mo. 387, 46 S.W ... 175; State v. Maggard, 160 Mo. 469, 61 S.W. 184. For ... learned research upon the question reference is made to ... State v. Toombs, [331 Mo. 612] 326 Mo. 981, 34 ... S.W.2d 61, which reviews authorities from many ... ...
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