| Great Britain. Courts, Frederick Augustus Carrington, Andrew Valentine Kirwan - 1850 - 1168 páginas
...procuring their attendance. Rtg. v. Dibley, 818 9. If a person finds goods that have been actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been lost, and, appropriating them with intent to take the entire dominion over them, really believing, when he takes... | |
| 1854 - 740 páginas
...April 30, 1849. Larceny — Lost Property — Animus Furandi. If a man find lost goods, and appropriate them with intent to take the entire dominion over...believing, when he takes them, that the owner cannot he found, he is not guilty of larceny. But if he takes them with such intent, really believing that... | |
| John Monson Carrow, J. Hamerton, T. Allen - 1849 - 780 páginas
...Wynn, 414 (4). Finding lost Goods — Felonious Taking. If a person finds goods that have been actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been lost, and appropriate them, with the intent to take the entire dominion over them, really believing, when he... | |
| 1849 - 684 páginas
...that the rule of law on this subject seems to be, that if a man find goods that have been actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been lost, and appropriate them with intent to take the entire dominion over them, really believing when he takes... | |
| John Monson Carrow - 1849 - 802 páginas
...Wymn, 414 (4). Finding lost Goods — Felonious Taking. If a person finds goods that have been actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been lost, and appropriate them, with the intent to take the entire dominion over them, really believing, when he... | |
| Edward William Cox - 1850 - 726 páginas
...that the rule oi law on this subject seems to be, that if a man find goods that have been actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been lost, and appropriate them with intent to take the entire dominion over them, really believing when he takes... | |
| Francis Towers Streeten, Henry John Hodgson - 1852 - 818 páginas
...Young, 1 Den. CC 194 ¡ 2 Car. & K. 466. (c) Cases of finding. If a man finds goods that are actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been...that the owner cannot be found, it is not larceny. Nor is it larceny if, after having so taken them, he obtains knowledge of the ownership, and then appropriates... | |
| Edmund Hatch Bennett, Chauncey Smith - 1858 - 680 páginas
...seems, to me, to be that if a man find goods that have actually been lost and appropriate them with the intent to take the entire dominion over them, really...that the owner cannot be found, it is not larceny. In applying this rule, as indeed in the application of all fixed rules, questions of some nicety may... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Criminal Appeal - 1852 - 692 páginas
...at least, not to know where to find them. If a man, therefore, finds goods that have been actually lost, or are reasonably supposed by him to have been lost, and appropriates them animo furandi, really believing when he takes them that the owner cannot be found, it is not larceny;... | |
| Charles Manley Smith - 1852 - 638 páginas
...387, where it was held, that if a person finds goods that have been lost, or are reasonably suplost, and appropriates them with intent to take the entire dominion over them, but reasonably believing that the owner can be found, it is larceny. But if he have no intention of... | |
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