Property Offenses Flashcards
What is larceny?
Larceny consists of:
• A taking (obtaining control)
• And carrying away (asportation)
• Of tangible personal property (excluding realty, services, and intangibles, but including written instruments embodying intangible rights such as stock certificates)
• Of another with possession
• By trespass (without consent or by consent induced by fraud)
• With intent to permanently deprive that person of their interest in the property
What is asportation?
The slightest movement of the property is enough for purposes of the bar exam.
What is possession?
The property must be taken from the custody or possession of another. If the defendant had possession of the property at the time of the taking, the crime is not larceny, but may be embezzlement.
a. Custody vs. Possession
Possession involves a greater scope of authority to deal with the property than does custody. Generally, the defendant has possession if they were given discretionary authority over the property and has custody if they were given only limited authority over the property. Ordinarily, low level employees have only custody of an employer’s property and so are guilty of larceny for taking it.
b. Bailee and “Breaking Bulk”
Generally, a bailee has possession and thus may be guilty of embezzlement if they take the property. However, if the bailee opens closed containers in which the property has been placed by the bailor (that is, the bailee “breaks bulk”), the possession is regarded, by use of a fiction, as returning to the bailor, and thus the bailee may then be guilty of larceny if they take that property.
What is the intent to permanently deprive?
Generally, larceny requires that at the time of the taking the defendant intended to permanently deprive a person of their property.
a. Sufficient Intent
An intent to create a substantial risk of loss, or an intent to sell or pledge the goods to the owner, is sufficient for larceny.
b. Insufficient Intent
Where the defendant believes that the property they are taking is theirs or where they intend only to borrow the property or to keep it as repayment of a debt, there is no larceny.
c. Possibly Sufficient Intent
There may be larceny where the defendant intends to pay for the goods (if the goods were not for sale) or intends to collect a reward from the owner (if there is no intent to return
the goods absent a reward).
What about abandoned, lost, or mislaid property?
Larceny can be committed with lost or mislaid property or property that has been delivered by mistake, but not with abandoned property.
What is continuing trespass situation?
If the defendant wrongfully takes property without the intent to permanently deprive (for example, without permission borrows an umbrella), and later decides to keep the property, the defendant is guilty of larceny when they decide to keep it. However, if the original taking was not wrongful (for example, the defendant took the umbrella thinking it was theirs) and later decides to keep it, it is not
larceny.
What is embezzlement?
Embezzlement is:
• The fraudulent
• Conversion (that is, dealing with the property in a manner inconsistent with the arrangement by which defendant has possession)
• Of personal property
• Of another
• By a person in lawful possession of that property
How is embezzlement different from larceny?
Embezzlement differs from larceny because in embezzlement the defendant misappropriates property while it is in their rightful possession, while in larceny the defendant misappropriates property not in their possession.
What is the fraudulent intent necessary for embezzlement?
Defendant must intend to defraud.
a. Intent to Restore
If the defendant intends to restore the exact property taken, it is not embezzlement. However, if the defendant intends to restore similar or substantially identical property, it is embezzlement, even if it was money that was initially taken and other money—of identical value—that they intended to return.
b. Claim of Right
As in larceny, embezzlement is not committed if the conversion is pursuant to a claim of right to the property. Whether defendant took the property openly is an important factor.
c. Notes for the Multistate Bar Exam
• A trustee is often the MBE embezzler.
• A person does not have to carry away to be an embezzler—just the possession of the property is required.
• The embezzler does not have to get the benefit.
What are false pretenses?
The offense of false pretenses is: • Obtaining title • To personal property of another • By an intentional false statement of a past or existing fact • With intent to defraud the other
Is misrepresentation required for false pretenses?
The victim must actually be deceived by, or act in reliance on, the misrepresentation, and this must be a major factor (or the sole cause) of the victim passing title to the defendant. Traditionally, the defendant’s misrepresentation must have related to a past or present fact, and false promises to do something in the future, even without the present intent to perform, were not sufficient. However, under the M.P.C. and the modern prevailing view, any false representation suffices, including a false promise to perform in the future.
Does there have to be an intent to defraud for false pretenses?
Depending on the statute involved, the defendant must either have known the statement to be false or have intended that the victim rely on the misrepresentation. Most states will find that the defendant “knew” of the falsity of any statements when, after being put on notice of the high probability of the statement’s falsity, they deliberately avoided learning the truth.
How is false pretenses different from larceny by trick?
If the victim is tricked—by a misrepresentation of fact—into giving up mere custody or possession of property, the crime is larceny by trick. If the victim is tricked into giving up title to property, the crime is false pretenses.
What is robbery?
Robbery consists of:
• A taking
• Of personal property of another
• From the other’s person or presence (including anywhere in their vicinity)
• By force or threats of immediate death or physical injury to the victim, a family member, or some person in the victim’s presence
• With the intent to permanently deprive them of it
How is robbery different from larceny?
Robbery differs from larceny because robbery requires that the defendant use force or threats to obtain or retain the victim’s property. Thus, pickpocketing generally would be larceny, but if the victim notices the attempt and resists, the taking would be robbery.