Moss v. Hancock.
Moss v. Hancock.
Moss v. Hancock.
MOSS v. HANCOCK.
Criminal Law - Restitution of Stolen Property - Current Coin of the Realm - Larceny Act, 1861 (24 &
25 Vict. c. 96), s. 100.
A coin which is current coin of the realm may be sold as a curiosity, and in such a case, if the
seller is a thief who has stolen it from the owner and who has subsequently been prosecuted to
conviction, an order for its restitution to the owner maybe made under s. 100 of the Larceny Act,
1861:-
Semble, that no such order could be made if the coin had been passed into circulation as current
money, although it might be possible to identify it.
A thief stole from the respondent a five-pound gold piece (which by Royal proclamation had
been made current coin of the realm) and changed it with the appellant, who was a dealer in
curiosities, for five sovereigns:-
Held, that under the circumstances the coin had not been received by the appellant as current
coin, and that an order might be made under s. 100 of the Larceny Act, 1861, ordering the
appellant to restore it to the respondent.
On December 5, 1898, one Thomas Neale was charged before the Hove justices for that he, while
being a servant in the service of the respondent, feloniously did steal, take, and carry away one gold
five-pound piece and other articles the property of the respondent, his master. Neale pleaded
guilty, and was convicted and sentenced. The magistrates then made an order that the five-pound
gold piece which was produced in evidence should be restored to the respondent.
It appeared that Neale was a butler in the service of the respondent at Hove, and that the five-
pound gold piece was presented to the respondent by the committee of the Goldsmiths' Company
in the year 1887, and bore the date of that year.
The gold piece was always kept by the respondent in a case in a cabinet in his drawing-room, and it
had never been in circulation. Together with other property, it was stolen by Neale from the
respondent's residence on November 20, 1898.
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jewellery, and other articles, and Neale changed the five-pound gold piece with the appellant's son
at the appellant's shop at Brighton for five sovereigns.
The appellant's son stated in evidence that he made no inquiries of Neale respecting the five-pound
gold piece, but that he knew Neale was an indoor servant and had known him some little time as a
customer, but he refused to say whether he had known him for a week or a year, or for any definite
time. The appellant contended that the five-pound gold piece was current coin of the realm, and
was received as such by his son, who gave five sovereigns for it without any knowledge that it had
been stolen, and that the appellant was therefore entitled to retain it.
The justices were of opinion that under s. 100 of the Larceny Act, 1861 (24 & 25 Vict. c. 96), and s.
27, sub-s. 3, of the Summary Jurisdiction Act, 1879 (42 & 43 Vict. c. 49), they ought to order the
restitution of the five-pound gold piece to the respondent, as they found as a fact that the same was
his property, and had been stolen and parted with in manner hereinbefore mentioned, and they
accordingly made an order for its restitution.
At the request of the appellant, they stated this case for the opinion of the Court, but submitted
that the question was a question of fact, and doubted whether they had jurisdiction to state a case.
Firminger, for the appellant. The justices had no jurisdiction to order the restitution of this five-
pound gold piece. By Royal proclamation in 1887, made under the provisions of the Coinage Act,
1870, five-pound gold pieces were declared to be current coin and legal tender. No doubt s. 100 of
the Larceny Act, 1861, under which the justices purported to make the order (1), speaks of
"money," but the "money" there referred
(1) By the Larceny Act, 1861 (24 & 25 Vict. c. 96), s. 100, "If any person guilty of any such felony or
misdemeanour as is mentioned in this Act in stealing, taking, obtaining, extorting, embezzling,
converting, or disposing of or knowingly receiving any chattel, money, valuable security, or other
property whatsoever, shall be indicted for such offence by or on behalf of the owner of the property
or his executor or administrator and convicted
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to is specific money set apart in a box or bag, and does not refer to money in actual circulation. The
first statute on the subject was 21 Hen. 8, c. 11, and under that statute it was held that there could
be restitution either of money actually found in the possession of the thief or of money which was
in some way ear-marked, as by being in a box or bag: Holiday v. Hicks. (1) In a similar manner an
order might be made for the restitution of the proceeds of stolen property: Hale's P. C. 541; but
there is no power to make an order for the restitution of money which has once been put in
circulation: Miller v. Race (2); the reason being (as is there pointed out) that such money cannot be
identified. The 21 Hen. 8, c. 11, was repealed by 7 & 8 Geo. 4, c. 27, and re-enacted by 7 & 8 Geo. 4,
c. 29, s. 57, by which it was extended to misdemeanours. The 7 & 8 Geo. 4, c. 29, was repealed by 24
& 25 Vict. c. 95. Looking at the present enactment, it is plain from the proviso that the Legislature
did not contemplate an order being made for the restitution of current coin which had passed into
circulation.
Boxall, for the respondent. The order for restitution was right. Admitting that the five-pound piece
was current coin
thereof, in such case the property shall be restore to the owner or his representative, and in every
case in this section aforesaid the Court before whom any person shall be tried for any such felony or
misdemeanour shall have power to award from time to time writs of restitution for the said
property, or to order the restitution thereof in a summary manner: Provided that if it shall appear
before any award or order made that any valuable security shall have been bonâ fide paid or
discharged by some person or body corporate liable to the payment thereof or being a negotiable
instrument, shall have been bonâ fide taken or received by transfer or delivery by some person or
body corporate for a just and valuable consideration without any notice, or without any reasonable
cause to suspect that the same had by any felony or misdemeanour been stolen, taken, obtained,
extorted, embezzled, converted, or disposed of, in such case the Court shall not award or order the
restitution of such security. ..."
By the Summary Jurisdiction Act, 1879 (42 & 43 Vict. c. 49), s. 27, "Where an indictable offence is ....
authorized to be dealt with summarily. ....
"(3.) The conviction for any such offence shall be of the same effect as a conviction for the offence
on indictment, and the Court may make the like order for the restitution of property as might have
been made by the Court before whom the person convicted would have been tried if he had been
tried on indictment."
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and legal tender, it was not passed as current coin on this occasion, but was sold to the appellant as
a curiosity. Money which is current may nevertheless have a special value and be sold as a curious
or rare coin. But, even if it were passed as current coin, there is nothing to prevent an order from
being made for its restitution if it can only be identified. The statute expressly speaks of the
restitution of money, and the only difficulty that arises is as to the identification of the particular
coins stolen. It is plain that money can be restored if it is found in the possession of the thief, and if
the money stolen has been passed away by him and yet can be identified as the actual coin stolen
by him, then an order for its restitution can be made. The doctrine that money has no ear-mark
merely refers to the difficulty of identification. [He cited Scattergood v. Silvester (1); Taylor v.
Plumer (2); Rex v. Stanton. (3)]
Firminger, replied.
May 6. DARLING J. read the following judgment:- This was a special case stated by justices, and the
following facts were stated as proved or agreed. The prisoner, a butler in the service of the
respondent, was convicted of having stolen from his master a five-pound gold piece, presented by
the Goldsmiths' Company to the respondent in the Jubilee year, 1887, the year of its date. The gold
piece had been kept in a cabinet until November, 1898, when it was stolen by the prisoner, and had
never been in circulation. The appellant is a dealer in new and second-hand clothes, jewellery, and
other articles; and the prisoner changed the gold piece with the appellant's son in the appellant's
shop for five sovereigns. Upon the prisoner's conviction the justices found that the five-pound gold
piece stolen by the prisoner was the respondent's property, and they made an order for its
restitution to the respondent, acting under the Larceny Act, 1861 (24 & 25 Vict. c. 96), s. 100, and
the Summary Jurisdiction Act, 1879 (42 & 43 Vict. c. 49), s. 27, sub-s. 3. It was admitted during the
argument that the gold
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pieces of the issue to which this one belonged are, by Royal proclamation, constituted current coin
of the realm; and for the appellant it was contended that the order for restitution was therefore
wrong. By s. 100 of the Larceny Act, 1861, it is provided that, on the prosecution to conviction of a
thief, the Court may order the restitution of the things stolen to the prosecutor, and, among other
stolen things, may order the restitution of money. It was contended before us in this case that
although, even after they had been sold by the thief in market overt and so the property in them
had passed, stolen goods might still, by virtue of an order under this statute, be revested in the
owner from whom they had been stolen, yet no such restitution could be ordered of money, unless
it were money in a bag or otherwise "ear-marked," as it was said. For this proposition decisions
given in actions for trover and conversion of money were cited such as Holiday v. Hicks. (1) But s.
100 of the statute distinctly applies to "money"; and long before this it was stated in Hale's Pleas of
the Crown, p. 542: "So if money be stolen, and the thief taken, and the money seized, he (that is,
the true owner) shall have restitution of the money." Reliance was also placed on the case of Miller
v. Race (2), which was an action of trover upon a bank-note, in which case it was held that the
property in such a note passes like cash by delivery. And Lord Mansfield there said: "Now they
(bank-notes) are not goods, nor securities, nor documents for debts, nor are so esteemed, but are
treated as money, as cash, in the ordinary course and transaction of business, by the general
consent of mankind, which gives them the credit and currency of money to all intents and purposes.
They are as much money as guineas themselves are, or any other current coin that is used in
common payments as money or cash." Further on in his judgment Lord Mansfield said, referring to
some expression attributed to Holt C.J., "'Tis pity that reporters sometimes catch at quaint
expressions that may happen to be dropped at the bar or bench, and mistake their meaning. - It has
been quaintly said that 'the reason why money cannot be followed is because it has no ear-mark';
but
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this is not true. The true reason is upon account of the currency of it; it cannot be recovered after it
has passed in currency. So, in case of money stolen, the true owner cannot recover it, after it has
been paid away fairly and honestly upon a valuable and bonâ fide consideration; but before money
has passed in currency, an action may be brought for the money itself." Now, here it is plain that the
mere fact that the stolen gold piece was money would not render it unfit for the application to it of
an order for restitution. The true question seems to me to be whether by the manner of dealing
with it which the thief adopted the gold piece passed in currency. The exchanging of a coin for other
coins is not conclusive proof that the exchanging was that of dealing with current coin on both sides.
Many coins, which yet have not been formally withdrawn from currency, have a price far beyond
their denominated value, by reason of their antiquity or rarity, or for their beauty of design or
execution (though this last is perhaps merely to say again by reason of the coins being struck in
another age and mint than ours). Money as currency, and not as medals, seems to me to have been
well defined by Mr. Walker in "Money, Trade, and Industry" (1) as "that which passes freely from
hand to hand throughout the community in final discharge of debts and full payment for
commodities, being accepted equally without reference to the character or credit of the person who
offers it and without the intention of the person who receives it to consume it or apply it to any
other use than in turn to tender it to others in discharge of debts or payment for commodities."
Bearing in mind all the foregoing considerations, and applying them to the facts stated for us by the
magistrates, I ask myself was this gold piece passed on in its character as coin of currency, or was it
rather the subject of a sale as an article of virtù. We are permitted to draw inferences from the facts
stated to us; and besides it was stated in the course of the argument that this piece was of
somewhat greater value than that of its denomination, and so was worth more than the five pieces
given in exchange for
(1) F. A. Walker, "Money, Trade, and Industry," p. 4, cited in Encyclopædia Britannica, sub tit.
"Money."
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it, though each of those was of a fifth of the nominal value of this gold piece. Upon the facts stated I
come to the conclusion that this gold piece never passed in currency, though it was the subject of a
sale (as a medal might have been) to a dealer in old or curious things; and that, therefore, the
magistrates acted within their powers in making an order for its restitution.
CHANNELL J. read the following judgment:- I entirely agree with the judgment that has just been
delivered, but as I have prepared a judgment of my own, I think it well to deliver it.
In this case, stated by magistrates, an appellant appeals against an order made under s. 100 of the
Larceny Act, ordering him to restore to the prosecutor a five-pound gold piece stolen from him by a
thief who has been convicted. The magistrates suggest a doubt whether they have power to state a
case, but I think that there is no foundation for this doubt. The magistrates next suggest that the
whole question is one of fact. They leave us, however, in some doubt as to what they mean to find.
In one view it is a question of fact, in another one of law. They state certain facts, but they do not
state what inference they draw from them. That being so, we have power under the rules of Court
to draw any inferences which the magistrates might have drawn. The facts have been already fully
stated, and I think the proper inference to be drawn from those facts is that the thief did not pass
the coin as current money, but sold it for 5l. It is true that, by Royal proclamation issued under the
Acts of Parliament relating to the coinage, this piece is made current coin of the realm, and might
have been used in payment of a debt or otherwise as money; but though it might be so used, it
might also be dealt with as if it were a medal, or ancient coin, or other curiosity. I think it was
offered to the appellant because he dealt in curiosities, and was taken by him as such.
It is also doubtful whether the magistrates meant to find the transaction bonâ fide. Without
meaning to suggest that the appellant's son could be found guilty of receiving the coin knowing it to
be stolen, I still think the circumstances were
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such that the magistrates might well find that it was not taken bonâ fide, so that, if it had been a bill
of exchange or other negotiable instrument, no better title would have been taken than the thief
had. If that was the view of the magistrates, they would be right in considering the question one of
fact; and if it was not their view, much that they state in the case is wholly immaterial. Under these
circumstances we ought to draw the inference ourselves, and upon that inference I think the order
of the magistrates a good one.
If the coin had been dealt with and transferred as current coin of the realm, as, for instance, in
payment for goods purchased or in satisfaction of a debt, or bonâ fide changed as money for money
of a different denomination, I think a question of law of great difficulty would arise. If that were the
case, no doubt the property would have passed to the appellant; but the operation of the statute is
to revest in the prosecutor, on conviction of the thief, the property in the thing stolen,
notwithstanding that the property in it has previously passed effectively to a transferee as by sale in
market overt: Horwood v. Smith (1); Scattergood v. Silvester.(2) The history of the matter is to be
found in 2 Hawkins's Pleas of the Crown, c. 23, ss. 49-57. The mere fact of the property in the coin
having passed would not, therefore, prevent the statute operating, and it is curious that in all the
statutes, beginning with that of 21 Hen. 8, c. 11, money stolen is placed on the same footing as
chattels stolen. Unless, therefore, there is something exceptional in the way in which property in
money passes, it would appear that, in all cases where by some accident the particular coin or coins
stolen could be identified at the date of the conviction, the person then owning them would lose his
property though the money had been taken bonâ fide. But we have to consider the proviso which
was in the statute of George IV. as well as in the present statute, protecting persons who had bonâ
fide taken a negotiable instrument. Now, all the considerations which could have induced the
Legislature to protect holders of stolen negotiable instruments must equally apply to stolen money
taken bonâ fide. In fact, it is because
(2) 15 Q. B. 506.
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bonâ fide, being treated in law as having lost its identity, and being merely so much money in the
hands of the person who took it, is really consistent with all the cases, if not with all the dicta. If it is
correct, it makes the 100th section of the Larceny Act, 1861, work as one would expect. I cannot
think that if a thief steals a sovereign and buys some article of small value with it in a shop and goes
away with the article and the change, and then by reason of some accidental circumstance, such as
the shopkeeper happening to have no other sovereign in his till at the time, the coin can be
identified in fact, that, upon conviction of the thief, the shopkeeper loses his title to the sovereign. I
incline to think that the effect of the 100th section of the Larceny Act, so far as money is concerned,
is limited to cases where the money stolen or the proceeds of it are found on the thief, or in the
possession of some one taking from him otherwise than by the money passing as currency. When
the statute of Henry VIII. was passed its most important effect probably was the same as the effect
of an appeal and writ of restitution in the older procedure: see 2 Hawkins's Pleas of the Crown, c.
23, ss. 49-57 - namely, to prevent forfeiture to the Crown or to any lord having right to waifs or
estrays or goods of felons; but all that is now obsolete.
I have thought it right to discuss the questions of law which were argued before us; but, as I have
already said, the points do not arise upon the inference which I think it right to draw from the facts
stated.
Appeal dismissed.
A. P. P. K.