That the charge of highway robbery ordinarily includes that of larceny was not contested. 1 Bishop Cr. Law, sec. 795. The defendant was convicted upon testimony tending to show that he snatched a purse containing a sum of money out of the hands of the prosecuting witness, when he was standing under a city lamp counting his money, and fled with it.
Laws 1895, ch. 285, does not make it necessary that an indictment for the larceny of a sum less than $20 should charge the taking from the person or from a dwelling-house in the daytime. S. v. Bynum, 117 N.C. 749; S. v.Downs, 116 N.C. 1064. The general rule as to the *Page 508 form of statutory indictments is that it is not requisite, where they are drawn under one section of the act, to negative an exception contained in a subsequent distinct section of the same statute. But such indictments might be maintained upon another familiar and well-settled principle, the application of which is more readily comprehended, when, as in the case at bar, the conviction for larceny is only possible because the charge of the higher crime includes that of the larceny.
The Superior Court has general jurisdiction of larcenies. The presumption is in favor of its jurisdiction, and where a defendant relies upon the fact that the amount stolen was less than $20, and that the taking was neither from the person nor a dwelling-house, the fact (814) that a sum less than $20 was taken neither from the person nor a dwelling-house is a matter of defense which it is incumbent on him to show in diminution of the sentence. The consequences of the conviction of the felony are in all respects the same, except that the law has given him the opportunity to ask for a smaller punishment when certain facts appear. Where there is a dispute about the value of the thing taken, it is likewise incumbent on the defendant to demand a finding upon that subject by the jury.
There was no exception to the charge of the court, and the question whether the proof of snatching from the hand of the prosecutor would be a taking from the person could not be raised by the motion in arrest of judgment. But we deem it proper to say that we think the hand is a part of one's person, and it was not contemplated by the Legislature that the exception in section 2 of the act should embrace only cases of taking something concealed about the body.
NO ERROR.
Cited: S. v. Davidson, 124 N.C. 844; S. v. R. R., 125 N.C. 671; S.v. Dixon, 149 N.C. 464; In re Holley, 154 N.C. 170.