Court Opinion

ID: 6510366
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:21:49.278515+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:51.566097
License: Public Domain

MANNING, J.
By a statute of this State it is enacted, that “any person who steals .... any part of any outstanding crop of corn or cotton, .... is guilty of grand larceny, and must, on conviction, be imprisoned in the penitentiary, or sentenced to hard labor, for the county, for not less than two, nor more than five years.” — Code of 1876, § 4358.
As was said in Gregg v. The State (55 Ala. 117), this statute, “ so far as it relates to an outstanding crop of corn or cotton, creates a new offense, unknown to the common law. Corn or cotton growing, or unsevered from the freehold, partakes of the nature of realty, and, in the absence of the statute, is not the subject of larceny.....There is no statute, or principle of tlie common law, which declares that it is a public offense to take or carry away growing or ungathered' corn, under any circumstances other than those which, under the act of February 20th, 1875” (the same.set. forth as above in the Code), “ make'it a felony, and punish it as such. It follows from this, that, while an outstanding crop of corn or cotton may be the subject of felonious larceny, it cannot be the subject of petit larceny.” And further': *26“ While the statute declares it is felony to steal any part of an outstanding crop of corn or cotton, without reference to its value, there is no such provision as to any of the subjects of petit larceny. . . . An indictment for the offense last named must aver some value of the article alleged to be stolen.” As to the amount of this value, compare sections 4358 and 4361 of the Code of 1876. To the same effect as the case just cited, is that of Holly v. The State, 54 Ala. 238.
In the indictment now under consideration, there are two counts, to each of which a demurrer was interposed. The first charges, that defendant “ feloniously took and carried away one peck of corn, a part of an outstanding crop of corn, of the value of tiuenty-five cents, the personal property of Ned Jones . . . and William Hurtand the other charges, that he feloniously took and carried away “ one peck of corn, a part of an outstanding crop of corn, the personal property of Harris Waller.” The verdict was “ guilty as charged in the indictment.”
The objection made to these counts is, that they are self-contradictory, inconsistent with themselves, and so uncertain as to make it doubtful what the offenses are which they charge. True, each count alleges that the “ peck of corn ” which defendant “ took and carried away,” was a “ part of an outstanding crop of corn.” But it alleges, also, that it was “ personal property,” and the first one alleges further, that it was of “ the value of twenty-five cents,” as if to emphasize the offense as that of petit larceny. Are these parts of the indictment to be treated as surplusage, or not — mere excess of language, which may be rejected; or are they matter of description and substance ?
It is said, that the designation of the property stolen, as personal property, cannot affect the validity of the indictment, any more than the description of a horse, in an indictment for the larceny of that animal, as real property, would make the indictment void; and the argument is a plausible one. But there is this difference in the cases : A horse cannot, under any circumstances, be realty. Of the two kinds of property, real and personal, a horse, and other like chattels, must necessarily be always personal. But of corn it is different. While it is on the stalk, not severed from the realty, it partakes of the realty, and, by the common law, was not the subject of larceny, though it might be of trespass. But, at the moment of severance, it becomes, and continues to be, personalty. This indictment, therefore, makes it uncertain whether, at the time defendant took and carried away the corn here referred to, it had been severed, and ceased to be a part of the outstanding crop, or not.
*27It is said that the additions, setting forth the value of the corn stolen, and that it was personal property, are mere surplusage, and, if stricken out, leave a perfect indictment under the statute. But, if you strike out the addition, “ part of an outstanding crop of corn,” you then also have a perfect indictment for the larceny of personal property. What authority have we for making one of these amendments in an indictment preferred by a grand jury acting under oath, rather than the other ?
The jury found defendant “ guilty as charged in the indictment.” Suppose the circuit judge had not heard any of the evidence (and though he did, he was not made the judge of what it proved); or, suppose defendant had pleaded simply “ guilty ” (especially to the first count); how could the judge certainly and judicially know, there being but a single offense, whether the sentence should be for grand or petit larceny. In this case, it was for grand larceny.
We think it important that such looseness and ambiguity in legal documents of this kind, having their origin in the courts, and made up under the supervision of official legal advisers, ought not to be allowed.
Let the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause remanded; defendant to remain in custody, until discharged by due course of law.
In Holly v. The State, supra, we notice an inconsistency in the case as reported, and as stated in the opinion. We have examined the original record, and find that the indictment charged, exactly as set forth in the opinion, that defendant “ feloniously took and carried away fifteen ears of corn, a portion of an outstanding crop, the property ” [not “ personal ” property] “ of William Bussell.” The errors in the printed report are not those of the court.