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Larceny

Larceny is a crime involving the unlawful taking or theft of the personal property of another person or business. It was an offence under the common law of England and became an offence in jurisdictions which incorporated the common law of England into their own law (also statutory law), where in many cases it remains in force.

The crime of larceny has been abolished in England, Wales, Ireland, and Northern Ireland, broken up into the specific crimes of burglary, robbery, fraud, theft, and related crimes. However, larceny remains an offence in parts of the United States, Jersey,[1] and in New South Wales,[2] Australia, involving the taking (caption) and carrying away (asportation) of personal property without the owner's consent and without intending to return it.

Etymology Edit

The word "larceny" is a late Middle English word, from the French word larcin, "theft". Its probable Latin root is latrocinium, a derivative of latro, "robber" (originally mercenary).

By nation Edit

Australia Edit

New South Wales Edit

In the state of New South Wales, the common law offence of larceny is punishable with up to 5 years' imprisonment.[3] Whilst section 117 of the New South Wales Crimes Act (1900) specifies the punishment for larceny, it is silent on the elements of the offence, leaving them to be articulated by the common law.[3] The leading authority on larceny in NSW is the High Court of Australia case of Ilich v R (1987).[4] This case stipulates the mens rea and actus reus elements required to be proven by the prosecution for a successful conviction.

Ireland Edit

The common law offence of larceny was abolished[5] on 1 August 2002.[6] However, proceedings for larceny committed before its abolition are not affected by this.[7]

United Kingdom Edit

England and Wales Edit

The common law offence of larceny was codified by the Larceny Act 1916. It was abolished[8] on 1 January 1969,[9] for all purposes not relating to offences committed before that date.[10] It has been replaced by the broader offence of theft under section 1(1) of the Theft Act 1968. This offence did incorporate some of the terminology and substance of larceny. Despite the offence's being abolished in England, it has been retained in the Crown Dependency of Jersey.[11]

Northern Ireland Edit

The common law offence of larceny was abolished[12] on 1 August 1969,[13] for all purposes not relating to offences committed before that date.[14] It has been replaced by the broader offence of theft under section 1(1) of the Theft Act (Northern Ireland) 1969.

United States Edit

 
Chart indicating the distribution of forms of larceny in the United States, according to the 2004 Uniform Crime Report.

Larceny laws in the United States have their roots in common law, pursuant to which larceny involves the trespassory taking (caption) and carrying away (asportation, removal) of the tangible personal property of another with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of its possession. Larceny is now codified as a statutory crime in all U.S. jurisdictions.[15]

Under many states' larceny statutes, including California, larceny can include the taking of "money, labor, or real or personal property."[16]

Elements Edit

Possession versus custody Edit

Larceny is a crime against possession. Furthermore, it has two elements which must be met: the actual taking of the property, even if momentarily (actus reus), and the culpable intent to deprive another of their property (mens rea). Larceny involves the trespassory taking of property from possession of another, with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of that property.[17]: 945  To understand larceny, one must understand the distinction between custody and possession.[18]

  • A person has possession of property when he has actual physical control over the property (actual possession) or he has the right to exercise considerable control over the disposition or use of the property (constructive possession).
  • A person has custody if he has actual physical control of the property, but the person who has constructive possession has substantially restricted the custodian's right to use the property.[18]

Examples of custody would be a store customer examining the goods of a merchant, or an employee who has been given the property of his employer to be used in his employment. This is to be contrasted to, for example, a person who has obtained actual possession of the property by fraud.

Ancient Roman law (first 50 years of written University law, possibly borrowing from Greek law there is no copy of) was more lax about "simple possession"; it was assumed "borrowing" if there was no one to ask: unless or until other factors arose (such as refusal to return promptly when asked).

Take Edit

The taking or caption element requires that the offender take actual physical control of the property, if but for a moment.[19] Under the common law, it was not sufficient if the offender simply deprived the victim of possession; the offender must have gained control over the property. Thus merely knocking an article from a person's hand was not larceny, as long as the defendant did not thereafter take it. The control must be complete. In a famous case, the defendant removed an overcoat from a department store mannequin and began to walk away with it. The overcoat was secured to the mannequin by a chain, a fact the defendant first discovered when the chain drew taut. These actions were held not to be larceny because the defendant never had complete control over the disposition and use of the coat.[20]

The taking may be only momentary. In another famous case,[21] the defendant snatched an earring from the victim which immediately became entangled in the victim's hair. The court held that the defendant's control over the property, although momentary, was sufficient to constitute a taking. The taking may be either direct or indirect; that is, accomplished by the criminal himself or an innocent agent.

The equivalent term "deprive" is also sometimes used:

To "deprive" another of property means (a) to withhold it or cause it to be withheld from him permanently or for so extended a period or under such circumstances that the major portion of its economic value or benefit is lost to him, or (b) to dispose of the property in such manner or under such circumstances as to render it unlikely that an owner will recover such property.

— N.Y. Penal L. § 155.00 (3).[22]

Carry away Edit

Traditionally, a thief must not only gain dominion over the property, but also must move it from its original position. The slightest movement, a hair's breadth, is sufficient.[23] However, the entirety of the property must be moved. As Professor Wayne LaFave noted, at its most literal this requirement renders the rotating of a doughnut a larceny, but not the rotating of a pie,[24] as all of the doughnut is moved through rotation while the pie's exact center remains in the same place when rotated. The movement must also be an actual asportation, rather than movement in preparation. For example,[25] in one case the victim had left his wheelbarrow in his yard. As was his custom he turned the wheelbarrow upside down to avoid water collecting in the tub. The defendant intending to steal the wheelbarrow turned it over but was apprehended by the owner before he could push the wheelbarrow away. The court held that the defendant's acts did not satisfy the asportation element of larceny because the movement of the wheelbarrow had merely been preparatory to the carrying away.

Contrary to popular belief, it is not necessary that the property be removed from the owner's premises or be taken off his property for an asportation to be complete. The slightest movement from its original position with the intent to steal is enough. The problem is proof. If a person picks up a package of steaks intending to steal them then changes her or his mind and puts the steak back in the meat counter, the crime of larceny has been committed but the state will have a difficult time proving it. However, if the thief conceals the steaks by sticking them inside clothing, his or her intent is rather clear. Of course, there could still be an innocent if bizarre explanation.[26]

That said, the asportation requirement is not universally required. In People v. Alamo, for example, the New York Court of Appeals eliminated the asportation requirement. In that case the defendant entered a stranger's car and turned on the car's lights and engine.[27] The Court read asportation as merely a corroborative element of possession and control, and thus not necessary to establish possession and control of a car because transportation is the purpose of a car. Turning it on suffices to establish that the thief has taken possession and control.[28]

Additionally, the Model Penal Code eliminates the asportation requirement and instead requires that the defendant "exercise unlawful control".[29] The drafters noted that historically the asportation requirement distinguished larceny (a felony) and attempted larceny (a misdemeanor).[30] They reasoned, therefore, that asportation was an irrelevant requirement because in modern criminal law, like the Model Penal Code,[31] the sentencing consequences between an attempted and completed crime are negligible.

Personal property Edit

From its creation[32] the subject matter of larceny has been tangible personal property,[33] with a physical existence: items that can be seen, held, and felt (or in technical terms, property that has a "corporeal existence").[34]

This limitation means that acts of common law larceny cannot be committed against land[35] or items attached to or forming part of land, such as buildings, trees or shrubbery, crops growing in the field, or minerals.[18] Acts of common law larceny cannot be committed against intangible things, such as love or affection, identity (identity theft is a type of fraud), or intellectual property, such as information and ideas. For example, if a person stole the Coca-Cola formula, the crime would be larceny, but the grade of the offense would be determined by the value of the paper on which the formula was recorded, not the value of the recipe. (Theft of trade secrets would be a different offense.)[36]

Services and labor, as well as intangible personal property (incorporeal rights)[18] such as contract rights and choses in action;[37] wills, codicils, or other testamentary documents; wild animals;[18] and items having no economic value[38] cannot be the subjects of acts of common-law larceny.

Most states have enacted statutes to expand the coverage of larceny to include most if not all of the items mentioned above.[citation needed] For example, North Carolina has statutes that make it a crime to steal choses in action, growing crops and so on.[39]

The restriction of the scope of larceny to personal property may have practical consequences. For example, a person may "steal" a central air conditioning unit by cutting the connections to the house, removing the unit from its concrete pad and hauling the disconnected unit away in a truck. In most jurisdictions, a central air conditioning unit changes from personal property to real property (a fixture) once it is attached to a building. Modernly, severance of a fixture from the realty would convert the fixture from real property back to personal property. However, the common law stated that if the severance and carrying away of a fixture were one continuous act, no larceny would occur. The defendant's actions in this example would thus merely constitute damage to real property, and would further not result in possession of stolen property since no larceny had taken place. However, if the person disconnected the air conditioner, left the premises to find someone to help him move the unit, returned and loaded the unit on his truck and left, the crime would be larceny.[citation needed]

Of another Edit

The property taken must be "of another". Thus wild animals cannot be stolen, although possession of a wild animal can itself be unlawful. Nor can co-owners be guilty of larceny. Larceny is a crime against possession. Therefore, it is possible for the person who has title to the property to steal the property from a person who had lawful possession. For example, states provide that a person who repairs a car had a lien on the car to secure payment for the work. The lien is a possessory lien meaning the repair person has the lien as long as he maintains possession of the car. If the title owner were to take the car from the lienholder this action could be prosecuted as larceny in some jurisdictions.

Without consent Edit

The taking must be trespassory; that is, it must be without the consent of the owner. This means that the taking must have been accomplished by stealth, force, threat of force, or deceit. If the offender obtained possession lawfully then a subsequent misappropriation is not larceny.

Intent to steal (animus furandi) Edit

The offender must have taken the property with the intent to steal it. Traditionally intent to steal is defined as the intent to deprive the owner of the possession of the property permanently. "Permanently" means indefinitely, that is, with no plan to return the property to the rightful owner. However, intent to steal includes other states of mind such as the intent to recklessly deprive the owner of the property permanently.

A person who takes property of another under the mistaken belief that the property belongs to him does not have the requisite intent to steal; nor does a person "intend to steal" property when he takes property intending to make temporary use of it and then return the property to the owner within a reasonable time.[40] However, it is not a defense that the defendant did not know that the property belonged to the true owner, only that he knew that it did not belong to him.

Must have value Edit

Larceny protects the possession of goods – objects that have economic value. A good has economic value if it has a price; that is, the property can be sold in a market. Thus, if the property taken has no economic value, it is not subject to larceny statutes. Under contemporary larceny laws, it is normally sufficient to support a larceny charge if the item has any value to the owner, even if its market value would be negligible.[41]

Under New York State law, written instruments, utility services, and items of unascertainable value have special rules,[42] and for grand larceny in the fourth degree, a motor vehicle must have value of $100 or greater.[43] Otherwise, value is defined generally as:

the market value of the property at the time and place of the crime, or if such cannot be satisfactorily ascertained, the cost of replacement of the property within a reasonable time after the crime.

— N.Y. Penal L. § 155.20 (1).[44]

Grand larceny Edit

Grand larceny is typically defined as larceny of a more significant amount of property. In the US, it is often defined as an amount valued at least $400. In New York, grand larceny refers to amounts of at least $1,000. Grand larceny is often classified as a felony with the concomitant possibility of a harsher sentence. In Virginia the threshold is only $5 if taken from a person, or $500 if not taken from the person.[45] The same penalty applies for stealing checks as for cash or other valuables.[46] Some states (such as North Carolina) use the term "felonious larceny" instead of grand larceny.

The classification of larceny as grand or petit larceny originated in an English statute passed in 1275 (grand is a French word meaning "large" while petit is a French word meaning "small"). Both were felonies, but the punishment for grand larceny was death while the punishment for petit larceny was forfeiture of property to the Crown and whipping. The classification was based on the value of the property taken. The offence was grand larceny if the value of the property taken was greater than twelve pence, approximately the value of a sheep in the thirteenth century.[47]

Most jurisdictions have discarded the grand/petit terminology and use value to classify larcenies as felonies or misdemeanors. "Value" means the fair market value of the property at the time and place taken. Most jurisdictions also make certain larcenies felonies regardless of the value of the property taken. For example, North Carolina General Statutes Section 14 - 72 (b)(1) makes the crime of larceny a felony "without regard to value" if the larceny is (1) from the person (2) committed pursuant to certain types of breaking or enterings (3) of any explosive or incendiary device or (4) of any firearm.[48] The modern spelling is petit larceny for the misdemeanor level.[citation needed] Some states may also charge certain types of larceny as "robbery", "burglary", "theft", "shoplifting", "conversion", and other terms.

Problem areas Edit

Subject matter Edit

As noted above one cannot steal items "affixed to the earth" because such things are not personal property. However, one of the remarkable qualities of property is its shiftiness: its ability to change its character often and quickly, from real to personal and from personal to real. The principal methods of achieving this transformation are attachment and severance. If personal property is attached to land, it becomes real property. And if real property is severed from the land (rendered unattached) it becomes personal property. Examples abound. A person buys a furnace. The furnace company dispatches a technician to deliver and install the heating system. Before installation the heating system is personal property. It has corporeal presence and it can be moved around as witnessed by the fact that the technician picked it up at the warehouse, loaded it into his truck, drove it to the house, unloaded it, placed it in the basement and hooked it up to the house. The "hooking up" is the act that transformed what was personal property to real property. Once it is installed it has become "attached to the land" (the house) and is now considered real property. The attachment to the house has to be more than casual for personal property to become real property. For example, a table lamp that is plugged into a wall socket is not real property. A window air conditioning unit is not real property.

Comparison with embezzlement Edit

Embezzlement differs from larceny in two ways. First, in embezzlement, an actual conversion must occur; second, the original taking must not be trespassory.[49] To say that the taking was not trespassory is to say that the person(s) performing the embezzlement had the right to possess, use, and/or access the assets in question, and that such person(s) subsequently secreted and converted the assets for an unintended and/or unsanctioned use. Conversion requires that the secretion interferes with the property, rather than just relocate it. As in larceny, the measure is not the gain to the embezzler, but the loss to the asset stakeholders. An example of conversion is when a person logs checks in a check register or transaction log as being used for one specific purpose and then explicitly uses the funds from the checking account for another and completely different purpose. It is important to make clear that embezzlement is not always a form of theft or an act of stealing, since those definitions specifically deal with taking something that does not belong to the perpetrator(s). Instead, embezzlement is, more generically, an act of deceitfully secreting assets by one or more persons that have been entrusted with such assets. The person(s) entrusted with such assets may or may not have an ownership stake in such assets.

In the case where it is a form of theft, distinguishing between embezzlement and larceny can be tricky.[50] Making the distinction is particularly difficult when dealing with misappropriations of property by employees. To prove embezzlement, the state must show that the employee had possession of the goods "by virtue of her employment"; that is, that the employee had the authority to exercise substantial control over the goods. Typically, in determining whether the employee had sufficient control the courts will look at factors such as the job title, job description and the particular employment practices. For example, the manager of a shoe department at a store would likely have sufficient control over the shoes that if she converted the goods to her own use she would be guilty of embezzlement. On the other hand, if the same employee were to steal cosmetics from the cosmetic counter, so long as they did not convert the product, the crime would not be embezzlement but larceny. For a case that exemplifies the difficulty of distinguishing larceny and embezzlement see State v. Weaver, 359 N.C. 246; 607 S.E.2d 599 (2005).

By trick Edit

Using confidence tricks (deception) to get possession of property is larceny.

Larceny by trick is descriptive of the method used to obtain possession. The concept arose from Pear's Case decided in 1779.[51] The issue was whether a person who had fraudulently obtained possession of personal property (a horse) could be convicted of larceny. The chief impediment to conviction was the doctrine of possessorial immunity which said that a person who had acquired possession lawfully, that is with the consent of the owner, could not be prosecuted for larceny. Clearly the owner of the horse had given the defendant possession of the animal – he had agreed that the defendant could borrow the horse to ride to Surrey.[52] The case would seem to have been cut and dried – the doctrine of possessorial immunity applied and the defendant was therefore not guilty of larceny. The court held that consent induced by fraud was not consent in the eyes of the law. The fraudulent act that induced the owner to transfer possession "vitiated" the consent. This concept of consent broadened the scope of larceny. Before, consent meant the voluntary relinquishment of possession and thus property was wrongfully taken only if the defendant acquired possession by stealth, force or threat of force.

By employees Edit

An employee is generally presumed to have custody rather than possession of property of his employer used during his employment. Thus the misappropriation would be larceny. However, officers, managers and employees who have significant authority over the disposition or use of the employer's property have possession rather than custody and the misappropriation of the property would likely be embezzlement rather than larceny. Determining whether an employee has custody or possession can be difficult. A careful examination of the employee's duties and responsibilities, his authority over the property and the actual business practices is required.[53]

If a third party transfers possession of property to an employee for delivery to his employer, the employee has possession of the property and his conversion of the property would be embezzlement rather than larceny. For example, if a customer of a bank delivers money to a teller to deposit in the customer's account, the teller had possession of the property and his misappropriation would be embezzlement rather than larceny. However, once the teller transfers possession of the money to his employer, by placing the money in the till for example, the subsequent taking would be larceny rather than embezzlement. This rule does not apply if the teller intending to steal the property places the money in the till merely as a temporary repository or to hide his peculation.

Aggregation issues Edit

Thievery may well involve many items of personal property stolen from multiple victims. Questions arise as to whether such situations are to be treated as one large theft or multiple small ones. The answer depends on the circumstances. If a thief steals multiple items from one victim during a single episode the courts doubtlessly would treat the act as one crime. The same result would obtain if the thief stole items from the same victim over a period of time on the grounds that the stealing was pursuant to a common scheme or plan. The effect would be that the state could aggregate the value of the various items taken in determining whether the crime was a felony or misdemeanor. Such a result would not always work to the criminal's detriment. Aggregation is also generally permitted when the thief steals property from multiple victims at the same time. For example, a thief steals "rims" from several cars parked in the same lot. On the other hand, aggregation is not permitted when a thief steals items from various victims at different times and places.[54]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Meagher, Gerard (16 August 2018). "Danny Cipriani arrested in Jersey after nightclub incident". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  2. ^ "NSW Crimes Act 1900 No. 40, section 117". Legislation.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 2013-11-12.
  3. ^ a b Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) s 117 Punishment for larceny
  4. ^ Ilich v R [1987] HCA 1, (1987) 162 CLR 110, High Court (Australia).
  5. ^ The Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001 (No.50), section 3(2) Irishstatutebook.ie
  6. ^ The Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001 (Commencement) Order 2002 (S.I. No. 252/2002), article 2(a) Irishstatutebook.ie
  7. ^ The Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001 (No.50), section 3(3)
  8. ^ The Theft Act 1968 (c.60), section 32(1)(a) Legislation.gov.uk
  9. ^ The Theft Act 1968 (c.60), section 35(1) Legislation.gov.uk
  10. ^ Theft Act 1968 (c.60), section 32
  11. ^ "What is larceny? The meaning of the charge Danny Cipriani faced". inews.co.uk. August 16, 2018.
  12. ^ Theft Act (Northern Ireland) 1969 (c.16) (N.I.), section 30(1)(a) Legislation.gov.uk
  13. ^ Theft Act (Northern Ireland) 1969 (c.16) (N.I.), section 33(1) Legislation.gov.uk
  14. ^ Theft Act (Northern Ireland) 1969 (c.16), section 30
  15. ^ Gayla, Marella (9 August 2017). "What's the Punishment for Theft? Depends On What State You're In". The Marshall Project. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  16. ^ See, e.g., "California Penal Code, Sec. 487". California Legislative Information. California State Legislature. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  17. ^ Criminal Law - Cases and Materials, 7th ed. 2012, Wolters Kluwer Law & Business; John Kaplan, Robert Weisberg, Guyora Binder, ISBN 978-1-4548-0698-1, law.stanford.edu
  18. ^ a b c d e Joshua Dressler, Understanding Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (Lexis 2001) ISBN 0-8205-5027-2
  19. ^ Originally, the caption element required an actual physical taking of the property from the victim's person. Takings accomplished by stealth or deceit were not punishable. This limitation existed because larceny's original purpose was to punish breaches of peace rather than violations of property interests
  20. ^ People v. Meyer, 75 Cal. 383 (1888).
  21. ^ King v. Lapier, 1 Leach 320, 168 Eng.Rep. 263 (1784).
  22. ^ N.Y. Penal L. § 155.00 (3), found at NY State assembly website. Retrieved october 2, 2008.
  23. ^ West Virginia v. Chambers, 22 W. Va. 779 (1883); see also Wallis v Lane [1964] VicRp 41, [1964] VR 293, Supreme Court (Vic, Australia).
  24. ^ LaFave, Criminal Law 3rd ed. (West 2000) 804 n. 11
  25. ^ Boyce & Perkins, Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (1992) at 324.
  26. ^ See State v. Houston, 688 S.W.2d 838, 840 (Tenn.Cr.App. 1984).
  27. ^ 34 N.Y.2d 453, 358 N.Y.S.2d 375 (1974).
  28. ^ Id. at 379, 381.
  29. ^ Section 223.2(1).
  30. ^ Model Penal Code and Commentaries, Comment to §223.2(1), at 164 (1980).
  31. ^ §5.01
  32. ^ Larceny is a common law offense. The definition of the crime, its elements, evolved into its present form by the end of the thirteenth century.
  33. ^ For example, one can steal a person's social security card and use the information to obtain a credit card and make transactions. However, using the social security number is not larceny because the information, although of substantial value, is not tangible personal property. The theft of the card itself is larceny but that would only be a misdemeanor given the minimal value of the paper used to print the card.
  34. ^ Joshua Dressler, Understanding Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (Lexis 2001) ISBN 0-8205-5027-2 at 556.
  35. ^ 4 Blackstone at 232
  36. ^ See Singer & LaFond, Criminal Law: Examples and Explanations, 4th ed. Aspen (2005) 256.
  37. ^ Singer & LaFond, Criminal Law (Aspen 1987), at 256.
  38. ^ Boyce & Perkins, Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (1992) ISBN 0-88277-067-5
  39. ^ N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 14-70 through 14-86.3.
  40. ^ Lafave, Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (West 2000) 812 citing Impson v. State, 47 Ariz. 573, 58 P.2d 523 (1936)
  41. ^ Bequai, August (1978). Computer Crime. Lexington Press. pp. 28–29. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.71.2420. ISBN 978-0669017281.
  42. ^ See N.Y. Penal L. § 155.20 (2), (3), (4), found at N.Y. state Assembly website. Retrieved October 2, 2008.
  43. ^ N.Y. Penal L. § 155.30 (8), found at N.Y. state Assembly website. Retrieved October 2, 2008.
  44. ^ N.Y. Penal L. § 155.20 (1), found at N.Y. state Assembly website. Retrieved October 2, 2008.
  45. ^ "Virginia Grand Larceny Law Changes July 1, 2018". Virginia Law Library. Commonwealth of Virginia. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  46. ^ § 18.2-98., Code of Virginia, 1950.
  47. ^ Boyce & Perkins, Criminal Law 3rd ed. (Foundation Press 1982) 335.
  48. ^ N.C.G.S. 14 - 72(b)(1)- (6)
  49. ^ Singer & LaFond, Criminal Law (Aspen 1997) at 213.
  50. ^ In their book Criminal Law, Singer and LaFond provide an analytical method for making these distinctions. Singer & LaFond, Criminal Law (Aspen 1997), 221.
  51. ^ King v Pear, 1 Leach 212, 168 Eng.Rep. 208 (1779).
  52. ^ "Browse - Central Criminal Court". Oldbaileyonline.org. Retrieved 2013-11-12.
  53. ^ North Carolina courts interpreted a statute passed by Parliament in 1528[which?] as creating an offense called "larceny by employee"; an offense that was separate and distinct from common law larceny.[citation needed] However, as Perkins notes, the purpose of the statute was not to create a new offense but was merely to confirm that the acts described in the statute met the elements of common law larceny.
  54. ^ Lafave, Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (West 2000) Sec. 8.4[b].

larceny, other, uses, disambiguation, crime, involving, unlawful, taking, theft, personal, property, another, person, business, offence, under, common, england, became, offence, jurisdictions, which, incorporated, common, england, into, their, also, statutory,. For other uses see Larceny disambiguation Larceny is a crime involving the unlawful taking or theft of the personal property of another person or business It was an offence under the common law of England and became an offence in jurisdictions which incorporated the common law of England into their own law also statutory law where in many cases it remains in force The crime of larceny has been abolished in England Wales Ireland and Northern Ireland broken up into the specific crimes of burglary robbery fraud theft and related crimes However larceny remains an offence in parts of the United States Jersey 1 and in New South Wales 2 Australia involving the taking caption and carrying away asportation of personal property without the owner s consent and without intending to return it Contents 1 Etymology 2 By nation 2 1 Australia 2 1 1 New South Wales 2 2 Ireland 2 3 United Kingdom 2 3 1 England and Wales 2 3 2 Northern Ireland 2 4 United States 3 Elements 3 1 Possession versus custody 3 2 Take 3 3 Carry away 3 4 Personal property 3 5 Of another 3 6 Without consent 3 7 Intent to steal animus furandi 3 8 Must have value 3 8 1 Grand larceny 4 Problem areas 4 1 Subject matter 4 2 Comparison with embezzlement 4 2 1 By trick 4 2 2 By employees 4 2 3 Aggregation issues 5 See also 6 ReferencesEtymology EditThe word larceny is a late Middle English word from the French word larcin theft Its probable Latin root is latrocinium a derivative of latro robber originally mercenary By nation EditAustralia Edit New South Wales Edit In the state of New South Wales the common law offence of larceny is punishable with up to 5 years imprisonment 3 Whilst section 117 of the New South Wales Crimes Act 1900 specifies the punishment for larceny it is silent on the elements of the offence leaving them to be articulated by the common law 3 The leading authority on larceny in NSW is the High Court of Australia case of Ilich v R 1987 4 This case stipulates the mens rea and actus reus elements required to be proven by the prosecution for a successful conviction Ireland Edit The common law offence of larceny was abolished 5 on 1 August 2002 6 However proceedings for larceny committed before its abolition are not affected by this 7 United Kingdom Edit England and Wales Edit The common law offence of larceny was codified by the Larceny Act 1916 It was abolished 8 on 1 January 1969 9 for all purposes not relating to offences committed before that date 10 It has been replaced by the broader offence of theft under section 1 1 of the Theft Act 1968 This offence did incorporate some of the terminology and substance of larceny Despite the offence s being abolished in England it has been retained in the Crown Dependency of Jersey 11 Northern Ireland Edit The common law offence of larceny was abolished 12 on 1 August 1969 13 for all purposes not relating to offences committed before that date 14 It has been replaced by the broader offence of theft under section 1 1 of the Theft Act Northern Ireland 1969 United States Edit nbsp Chart indicating the distribution of forms of larceny in the United States according to the 2004 Uniform Crime Report Larceny laws in the United States have their roots in common law pursuant to which larceny involves the trespassory taking caption and carrying away asportation removal of the tangible personal property of another with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of its possession Larceny is now codified as a statutory crime in all U S jurisdictions 15 Under many states larceny statutes including California larceny can include the taking of money labor or real or personal property 16 Elements EditPossession versus custody Edit Larceny is a crime against possession Furthermore it has two elements which must be met the actual taking of the property even if momentarily actus reus and the culpable intent to deprive another of their property mens rea Larceny involves the trespassory taking of property from possession of another with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of that property 17 945 To understand larceny one must understand the distinction between custody and possession 18 A person has possession of property when he has actual physical control over the property actual possession or he has the right to exercise considerable control over the disposition or use of the property constructive possession A person has custody if he has actual physical control of the property but the person who has constructive possession has substantially restricted the custodian s right to use the property 18 Examples of custody would be a store customer examining the goods of a merchant or an employee who has been given the property of his employer to be used in his employment This is to be contrasted to for example a person who has obtained actual possession of the property by fraud Ancient Roman law first 50 years of written University law possibly borrowing from Greek law there is no copy of was more lax about simple possession it was assumed borrowing if there was no one to ask unless or until other factors arose such as refusal to return promptly when asked Take Edit The taking or caption element requires that the offender take actual physical control of the property if but for a moment 19 Under the common law it was not sufficient if the offender simply deprived the victim of possession the offender must have gained control over the property Thus merely knocking an article from a person s hand was not larceny as long as the defendant did not thereafter take it The control must be complete In a famous case the defendant removed an overcoat from a department store mannequin and began to walk away with it The overcoat was secured to the mannequin by a chain a fact the defendant first discovered when the chain drew taut These actions were held not to be larceny because the defendant never had complete control over the disposition and use of the coat 20 The taking may be only momentary In another famous case 21 the defendant snatched an earring from the victim which immediately became entangled in the victim s hair The court held that the defendant s control over the property although momentary was sufficient to constitute a taking The taking may be either direct or indirect that is accomplished by the criminal himself or an innocent agent The equivalent term deprive is also sometimes used To deprive another of property means a to withhold it or cause it to be withheld from him permanently or for so extended a period or under such circumstances that the major portion of its economic value or benefit is lost to him or b to dispose of the property in such manner or under such circumstances as to render it unlikely that an owner will recover such property N Y Penal L 155 00 3 22 Carry away Edit Traditionally a thief must not only gain dominion over the property but also must move it from its original position The slightest movement a hair s breadth is sufficient 23 However the entirety of the property must be moved As Professor Wayne LaFave noted at its most literal this requirement renders the rotating of a doughnut a larceny but not the rotating of a pie 24 as all of the doughnut is moved through rotation while the pie s exact center remains in the same place when rotated The movement must also be an actual asportation rather than movement in preparation For example 25 in one case the victim had left his wheelbarrow in his yard As was his custom he turned the wheelbarrow upside down to avoid water collecting in the tub The defendant intending to steal the wheelbarrow turned it over but was apprehended by the owner before he could push the wheelbarrow away The court held that the defendant s acts did not satisfy the asportation element of larceny because the movement of the wheelbarrow had merely been preparatory to the carrying away Contrary to popular belief it is not necessary that the property be removed from the owner s premises or be taken off his property for an asportation to be complete The slightest movement from its original position with the intent to steal is enough The problem is proof If a person picks up a package of steaks intending to steal them then changes her or his mind and puts the steak back in the meat counter the crime of larceny has been committed but the state will have a difficult time proving it However if the thief conceals the steaks by sticking them inside clothing his or her intent is rather clear Of course there could still be an innocent if bizarre explanation 26 That said the asportation requirement is not universally required In People v Alamo for example the New York Court of Appeals eliminated the asportation requirement In that case the defendant entered a stranger s car and turned on the car s lights and engine 27 The Court read asportation as merely a corroborative element of possession and control and thus not necessary to establish possession and control of a car because transportation is the purpose of a car Turning it on suffices to establish that the thief has taken possession and control 28 Additionally the Model Penal Code eliminates the asportation requirement and instead requires that the defendant exercise unlawful control 29 The drafters noted that historically the asportation requirement distinguished larceny a felony and attempted larceny a misdemeanor 30 They reasoned therefore that asportation was an irrelevant requirement because in modern criminal law like the Model Penal Code 31 the sentencing consequences between an attempted and completed crime are negligible Personal property Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message From its creation 32 the subject matter of larceny has been tangible personal property 33 with a physical existence items that can be seen held and felt or in technical terms property that has a corporeal existence 34 This limitation means that acts of common law larceny cannot be committed against land 35 or items attached to or forming part of land such as buildings trees or shrubbery crops growing in the field or minerals 18 Acts of common law larceny cannot be committed against intangible things such as love or affection identity identity theft is a type of fraud or intellectual property such as information and ideas For example if a person stole the Coca Cola formula the crime would be larceny but the grade of the offense would be determined by the value of the paper on which the formula was recorded not the value of the recipe Theft of trade secrets would be a different offense 36 Services and labor as well as intangible personal property incorporeal rights 18 such as contract rights and choses in action 37 wills codicils or other testamentary documents wild animals 18 and items having no economic value 38 cannot be the subjects of acts of common law larceny Most states have enacted statutes to expand the coverage of larceny to include most if not all of the items mentioned above citation needed For example North Carolina has statutes that make it a crime to steal choses in action growing crops and so on 39 The restriction of the scope of larceny to personal property may have practical consequences For example a person may steal a central air conditioning unit by cutting the connections to the house removing the unit from its concrete pad and hauling the disconnected unit away in a truck In most jurisdictions a central air conditioning unit changes from personal property to real property a fixture once it is attached to a building Modernly severance of a fixture from the realty would convert the fixture from real property back to personal property However the common law stated that if the severance and carrying away of a fixture were one continuous act no larceny would occur The defendant s actions in this example would thus merely constitute damage to real property and would further not result in possession of stolen property since no larceny had taken place However if the person disconnected the air conditioner left the premises to find someone to help him move the unit returned and loaded the unit on his truck and left the crime would be larceny citation needed Of another Edit The property taken must be of another Thus wild animals cannot be stolen although possession of a wild animal can itself be unlawful Nor can co owners be guilty of larceny Larceny is a crime against possession Therefore it is possible for the person who has title to the property to steal the property from a person who had lawful possession For example states provide that a person who repairs a car had a lien on the car to secure payment for the work The lien is a possessory lien meaning the repair person has the lien as long as he maintains possession of the car If the title owner were to take the car from the lienholder this action could be prosecuted as larceny in some jurisdictions Without consent Edit The taking must be trespassory that is it must be without the consent of the owner This means that the taking must have been accomplished by stealth force threat of force or deceit If the offender obtained possession lawfully then a subsequent misappropriation is not larceny Intent to steal animus furandi Edit See also Furtum The offender must have taken the property with the intent to steal it Traditionally intent to steal is defined as the intent to deprive the owner of the possession of the property permanently Permanently means indefinitely that is with no plan to return the property to the rightful owner However intent to steal includes other states of mind such as the intent to recklessly deprive the owner of the property permanently A person who takes property of another under the mistaken belief that the property belongs to him does not have the requisite intent to steal nor does a person intend to steal property when he takes property intending to make temporary use of it and then return the property to the owner within a reasonable time 40 However it is not a defense that the defendant did not know that the property belonged to the true owner only that he knew that it did not belong to him Must have value Edit Larceny protects the possession of goods objects that have economic value A good has economic value if it has a price that is the property can be sold in a market Thus if the property taken has no economic value it is not subject to larceny statutes Under contemporary larceny laws it is normally sufficient to support a larceny charge if the item has any value to the owner even if its market value would be negligible 41 Under New York State law written instruments utility services and items of unascertainable value have special rules 42 and for grand larceny in the fourth degree a motor vehicle must have value of 100 or greater 43 Otherwise value is defined generally as the market value of the property at the time and place of the crime or if such cannot be satisfactorily ascertained the cost of replacement of the property within a reasonable time after the crime N Y Penal L 155 20 1 44 Grand larceny Edit Grand larceny redirects here For the 1987 film see Grand Larceny For the 1922 lost film see Grand Larceny 1922 film Grand larceny is typically defined as larceny of a more significant amount of property In the US it is often defined as an amount valued at least 400 In New York grand larceny refers to amounts of at least 1 000 Grand larceny is often classified as a felony with the concomitant possibility of a harsher sentence In Virginia the threshold is only 5 if taken from a person or 500 if not taken from the person 45 The same penalty applies for stealing checks as for cash or other valuables 46 Some states such as North Carolina use the term felonious larceny instead of grand larceny The classification of larceny as grand or petit larceny originated in an English statute passed in 1275 grand is a French word meaning large while petit is a French word meaning small Both were felonies but the punishment for grand larceny was death while the punishment for petit larceny was forfeiture of property to the Crown and whipping The classification was based on the value of the property taken The offence was grand larceny if the value of the property taken was greater than twelve pence approximately the value of a sheep in the thirteenth century 47 Most jurisdictions have discarded the grand petit terminology and use value to classify larcenies as felonies or misdemeanors Value means the fair market value of the property at the time and place taken Most jurisdictions also make certain larcenies felonies regardless of the value of the property taken For example North Carolina General Statutes Section 14 72 b 1 makes the crime of larceny a felony without regard to value if the larceny is 1 from the person 2 committed pursuant to certain types of breaking or enterings 3 of any explosive or incendiary device or 4 of any firearm 48 The modern spelling is petit larceny for the misdemeanor level citation needed Some states may also charge certain types of larceny as robbery burglary theft shoplifting conversion and other terms Problem areas EditSubject matter Edit As noted above one cannot steal items affixed to the earth because such things are not personal property However one of the remarkable qualities of property is its shiftiness its ability to change its character often and quickly from real to personal and from personal to real The principal methods of achieving this transformation are attachment and severance If personal property is attached to land it becomes real property And if real property is severed from the land rendered unattached it becomes personal property Examples abound A person buys a furnace The furnace company dispatches a technician to deliver and install the heating system Before installation the heating system is personal property It has corporeal presence and it can be moved around as witnessed by the fact that the technician picked it up at the warehouse loaded it into his truck drove it to the house unloaded it placed it in the basement and hooked it up to the house The hooking up is the act that transformed what was personal property to real property Once it is installed it has become attached to the land the house and is now considered real property The attachment to the house has to be more than casual for personal property to become real property For example a table lamp that is plugged into a wall socket is not real property A window air conditioning unit is not real property Comparison with embezzlement Edit Embezzlement differs from larceny in two ways First in embezzlement an actual conversion must occur second the original taking must not be trespassory 49 To say that the taking was not trespassory is to say that the person s performing the embezzlement had the right to possess use and or access the assets in question and that such person s subsequently secreted and converted the assets for an unintended and or unsanctioned use Conversion requires that the secretion interferes with the property rather than just relocate it As in larceny the measure is not the gain to the embezzler but the loss to the asset stakeholders An example of conversion is when a person logs checks in a check register or transaction log as being used for one specific purpose and then explicitly uses the funds from the checking account for another and completely different purpose It is important to make clear that embezzlement is not always a form of theft or an act of stealing since those definitions specifically deal with taking something that does not belong to the perpetrator s Instead embezzlement is more generically an act of deceitfully secreting assets by one or more persons that have been entrusted with such assets The person s entrusted with such assets may or may not have an ownership stake in such assets In the case where it is a form of theft distinguishing between embezzlement and larceny can be tricky 50 Making the distinction is particularly difficult when dealing with misappropriations of property by employees To prove embezzlement the state must show that the employee had possession of the goods by virtue of her employment that is that the employee had the authority to exercise substantial control over the goods Typically in determining whether the employee had sufficient control the courts will look at factors such as the job title job description and the particular employment practices For example the manager of a shoe department at a store would likely have sufficient control over the shoes that if she converted the goods to her own use she would be guilty of embezzlement On the other hand if the same employee were to steal cosmetics from the cosmetic counter so long as they did not convert the product the crime would not be embezzlement but larceny For a case that exemplifies the difficulty of distinguishing larceny and embezzlement see State v Weaver 359 N C 246 607 S E 2d 599 2005 By trick Edit See also Fraud Using confidence tricks deception to get possession of property is larceny Larceny by trick is descriptive of the method used to obtain possession The concept arose from Pear s Case decided in 1779 51 The issue was whether a person who had fraudulently obtained possession of personal property a horse could be convicted of larceny The chief impediment to conviction was the doctrine of possessorial immunity which said that a person who had acquired possession lawfully that is with the consent of the owner could not be prosecuted for larceny Clearly the owner of the horse had given the defendant possession of the animal he had agreed that the defendant could borrow the horse to ride to Surrey 52 The case would seem to have been cut and dried the doctrine of possessorial immunity applied and the defendant was therefore not guilty of larceny The court held that consent induced by fraud was not consent in the eyes of the law The fraudulent act that induced the owner to transfer possession vitiated the consent This concept of consent broadened the scope of larceny Before consent meant the voluntary relinquishment of possession and thus property was wrongfully taken only if the defendant acquired possession by stealth force or threat of force By employees Edit An employee is generally presumed to have custody rather than possession of property of his employer used during his employment Thus the misappropriation would be larceny However officers managers and employees who have significant authority over the disposition or use of the employer s property have possession rather than custody and the misappropriation of the property would likely be embezzlement rather than larceny Determining whether an employee has custody or possession can be difficult A careful examination of the employee s duties and responsibilities his authority over the property and the actual business practices is required 53 If a third party transfers possession of property to an employee for delivery to his employer the employee has possession of the property and his conversion of the property would be embezzlement rather than larceny For example if a customer of a bank delivers money to a teller to deposit in the customer s account the teller had possession of the property and his misappropriation would be embezzlement rather than larceny However once the teller transfers possession of the money to his employer by placing the money in the till for example the subsequent taking would be larceny rather than embezzlement This rule does not apply if the teller intending to steal the property places the money in the till merely as a temporary repository or to hide his peculation Aggregation issues Edit Thievery may well involve many items of personal property stolen from multiple victims Questions arise as to whether such situations are to be treated as one large theft or multiple small ones The answer depends on the circumstances If a thief steals multiple items from one victim during a single episode the courts doubtlessly would treat the act as one crime The same result would obtain if the thief stole items from the same victim over a period of time on the grounds that the stealing was pursuant to a common scheme or plan The effect would be that the state could aggregate the value of the various items taken in determining whether the crime was a felony or misdemeanor Such a result would not always work to the criminal s detriment Aggregation is also generally permitted when the thief steals property from multiple victims at the same time For example a thief steals rims from several cars parked in the same lot On the other hand aggregation is not permitted when a thief steals items from various victims at different times and places 54 See also EditPickpocketingReferences Edit Meagher Gerard 16 August 2018 Danny Cipriani arrested in Jersey after nightclub incident The Guardian Retrieved 16 August 2018 NSW Crimes Act 1900 No 40 section 117 Legislation nsw gov au Retrieved 2013 11 12 a b Crimes Act 1900 NSW s 117 Punishment for larceny Ilich v R 1987 HCA 1 1987 162 CLR 110 High Court Australia The Criminal Justice Theft and Fraud Offences Act 2001 No 50 section 3 2 Irishstatutebook ie The Criminal Justice Theft and Fraud Offences Act 2001 Commencement Order 2002 S I No 252 2002 article 2 a Irishstatutebook ie The Criminal Justice Theft and Fraud Offences Act 2001 No 50 section 3 3 The Theft Act 1968 c 60 section 32 1 a Legislation gov uk The Theft Act 1968 c 60 section 35 1 Legislation gov uk Theft Act 1968 c 60 section 32 What is larceny The meaning of the charge Danny Cipriani faced inews co uk August 16 2018 Theft Act Northern Ireland 1969 c 16 N I section 30 1 a Legislation gov uk Theft Act Northern Ireland 1969 c 16 N I section 33 1 Legislation gov uk Theft Act Northern Ireland 1969 c 16 section 30 Gayla Marella 9 August 2017 What s the Punishment for Theft Depends On What State You re In The Marshall Project Retrieved 30 October 2017 See e g California Penal Code Sec 487 California Legislative Information California State Legislature Retrieved 30 October 2017 Criminal Law Cases and Materials 7th ed 2012 Wolters Kluwer Law amp Business John Kaplan Robert Weisberg Guyora Binder ISBN 978 1 4548 0698 1 law stanford edu a b c d e Joshua Dressler Understanding Criminal Law 3rd ed Lexis 2001 ISBN 0 8205 5027 2 Originally the caption element required an actual physical taking of the property from the victim s person Takings accomplished by stealth or deceit were not punishable This limitation existed because larceny s original purpose was to punish breaches of peace rather than violations of property interests People v Meyer 75 Cal 383 1888 King v Lapier 1 Leach 320 168 Eng Rep 263 1784 N Y Penal L 155 00 3 found at NY State assembly website Retrieved october 2 2008 West Virginia v Chambers 22 W Va 779 1883 see also Wallis v Lane 1964 VicRp 41 1964 VR 293 Supreme Court Vic Australia LaFave Criminal Law 3rd ed West 2000 804 n 11 Boyce amp Perkins Criminal Law 3rd ed 1992 at 324 See State v Houston 688 S W 2d 838 840 Tenn Cr App 1984 34 N Y 2d 453 358 N Y S 2d 375 1974 Id at 379 381 Section 223 2 1 Model Penal Code and Commentaries Comment to 223 2 1 at 164 1980 5 01 Larceny is a common law offense The definition of the crime its elements evolved into its present form by the end of the thirteenth century For example one can steal a person s social security card and use the information to obtain a credit card and make transactions However using the social security number is not larceny because the information although of substantial value is not tangible personal property The theft of the card itself is larceny but that would only be a misdemeanor given the minimal value of the paper used to print the card Joshua Dressler Understanding Criminal Law 3rd ed Lexis 2001 ISBN 0 8205 5027 2 at 556 4 Blackstone at 232 See Singer amp LaFond Criminal Law Examples and Explanations 4th ed Aspen 2005 256 Singer amp LaFond Criminal Law Aspen 1987 at 256 Boyce amp Perkins Criminal Law 3rd ed 1992 ISBN 0 88277 067 5 N C Gen Stat 14 70 through 14 86 3 Lafave Criminal Law 3rd ed West 2000 812 citing Impson v State 47 Ariz 573 58 P 2d 523 1936 Bequai August 1978 Computer Crime Lexington Press pp 28 29 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 71 2420 ISBN 978 0669017281 See N Y Penal L 155 20 2 3 4 found at N Y state Assembly website Retrieved October 2 2008 N Y Penal L 155 30 8 found at N Y state Assembly website Retrieved October 2 2008 N Y Penal L 155 20 1 found at N Y state Assembly website Retrieved October 2 2008 Virginia Grand Larceny Law Changes July 1 2018 Virginia Law Library Commonwealth of Virginia Retrieved 25 June 2018 18 2 98 Code of Virginia 1950 Boyce amp Perkins Criminal Law 3rd ed Foundation Press 1982 335 N C G S 14 72 b 1 6 Singer amp LaFond Criminal Law Aspen 1997 at 213 In their book Criminal Law Singer and LaFond provide an analytical method for making these distinctions Singer amp LaFond Criminal Law Aspen 1997 221 King v Pear 1 Leach 212 168 Eng Rep 208 1779 Browse Central Criminal Court Oldbaileyonline org Retrieved 2013 11 12 North Carolina courts interpreted a statute passed by Parliament in 1528 which as creating an offense called larceny by employee an offense that was separate and distinct from common law larceny citation needed However as Perkins notes the purpose of the statute was not to create a new offense but was merely to confirm that the acts described in the statute met the elements of common law larceny Lafave Criminal Law 3rd ed West 2000 Sec 8 4 b Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Larceny amp oldid 1153743136 Grand larceny, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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