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58 L. Q. Rev. 340 (1942)
Larceny and Trespass

handle is hein.journals/lqr58 and id is 348 raw text is: LARCENY AND TRESPASS.
TnE CASE OF RILEY.
T HE natural reluctance of judges to allow an obviously
dishonest man to escape criminal punishment has often led
them to proclaim as established principles of law, doctrines which
were in fact not only quite new, but which have sometimes had
the unfortunate result of rendering the law itself more indistinct
and uncertain.'
An interesting illustration of such judicial innovations is to
be found in the case of Riley.2     A doctrine enunciated in this
case by the Court for Crown Cases Reserved seems to have been
accepted by the Courts and the writers ever since without
question, but it is the purpose of the present article to suggest
that the case was wrongly decided, and that a ratio decidendi
as stated in the judgment of the Court rested on inadequate
authority and was logically unsound.
Riley, early on a thick and rainy morning, drove his flock,
twenty-nine lambs, from a field in which he had been allowed
to put them overnight. He did not notice that a lamb belonging
to the prosecutor had joined his flock, until he had sold the
flock to a purchaser, who then pointed out that there was one
extra. Riley promptly sold that one also to him.         Riley was
indicted at quarter sessions for larceny of the lamb, and con-
victed, but the case was remitted to the Court for Crown Cases
Reserved.
In order to simplify the examination of the judgments in this
case it is necessary to make some remarks on the common law
principles of larceny, although space does not permit a full
development of the considerations upon which they are based.
From   the ancient definitions 3 it is clear that very early our
common    law   doctrine recognized    that in    larceny  criminal
liability depended upon two elements, a physical element and
a mental element. The physical element was made up of two
ingredients, (a) the simple physical act of seizing the thing
(cepit) and taking it away (asportavit)        and (b) a negative
1 See the remarks of H.M. Commissioners, Reports, 1839, Vol. XIX, p. xiv.
2 (1853) Dearsly 149; 22 L. J. M. C. 48.
3 Glanvil, lib. 10, cap. 13; Bracton, f. 150b; Coke, Inst. I, c. 47, p. 107.
4 Pollock & Maitland, History of English Law, II 498. 'There can, we think;
be little doubt that the  taking and carrying away  upon which our later law
insists, had been from the very first the very core of the English law of Theft.' Cf.
the American case, Harrison v. People (1872) 10 Am. Rep. 517.

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