The prisoner was indicted and convicted of stealing five hundred and one sacks of malt, the property of John Schelly. He resided at Hamilton, in the State of Ohio, and consigned this and other malt to the prisoner for sale at the city of New York, and it was there sold, but not according to the terms of the consignments. The proceeds, so far as they were received by him were not sent or remitted, as they should' have been, to the consignor, but in violation of the terms under which the malt was received, they were converted and appropriated by the prisoner to his own use. The malt was delivered to a railway company at Hamilton, in Ohio, by Schelly, its owner, and bills of lading taken for it by the terms of which the carrier undertook to transport and deliver it to. the prisoner at Melrose, in the city of New York, and it was there delivered to him accordingly. This was evidently induced by false representations made by the prisoner concerning his financial situation, and of the intention and purposes to be executed by him concerning it, and it was in reliance upon the truth of the representations made, that the prosecuting witness was induced to send the malt to him for sale. It was sent between the 7th of January and the 2d of March, 1875, and consisted of eleven different consignments, amounting to two thousand eight hundred and ninety bags, of about two and one-half bushels each.
As to nine of the consignments, invoices, etc., bills of sale were produced, stating in terms that the prisoner had bought the malt consigned, from the consignor ; but while they were made out in his writing they were not subscribed by him, and as to all of them he testified in the following manner : “You swore you thought he was good, and that is the reason you trusted him. Is that *398true, you did trust him because you thought he was good ? I would not trust him that amount; I would trust him a small amount. You did trust him. that amount ? I did trust.him ; he wrote me a letter and he told me a lie. From what he told you and wrote you, you trusted him, did you not ? He promised to come to me with money. Did you trust this man from what he said to you, and from what he wrote you, with all these goods ? Yes, sir ; I would not trust him that much. You would not have trusted him if he had not said these things, represented these things, would you ? Certainly I would not. Having said these things and written these things, you did trust him ? I did trust him in this big amount; I expected to get, money every day, and he promised to come down to Hamilton himself. You expected to get the money for your goods ? Certainly. You expected him to sell the goods in order that he should get money ? Yes, sir. You meant he should do that ? Yes, sir. When he did sell the goods he did precisely what you intended he should ? But when he did not send you the money, he did not do what you intended him to do ? No, sir.”
And the evidence discloses no different intention or purpose, concerning any portion of the consigned property. It was delivered by its owner, by means of these consignments, to the prisoner, with the intent that it should go into his possession, and be sold by him for the benefit of the consignor, and that the proceeds should be returned to him. What was given to the prisoner was the custody of the property for the accomplishment of a particular object — that of holding and selling it for the benefit of the consignor. The prisoner acquired no title to it, nor any right to withhold it from the consignor, who continued to be its owner, and could at any time, while the prisoner retained possession, have recovered it from him and countermanded his authority over it. In this respect the case differs from that of Kelly v. People, (13 S. C. N. Y. [6 Hun], 509), where the title as well as the possession were transferred to the prisoner. Here the prisoner had the possession merely, without the title, and the transaction showed, for the time being, and until the property was actually sold, was to, and did, remain in the consignor.
*399The court, at the trial, charged the jury that if the prisoner obtained possession of the goods with the intent to deprive the owner of his property in them and to defraud him, and not to account to him for the goods or for the money, and that he received the goods in pursuance of that design, then he might be convicted of larceny, and the request to charge that the offense, if any was committed, was that of obtaining property by false pretenses or embezzlement, and not that of larceny, wore refused. The prisoner’s counsel excepted to the charge as given and to these refusals.
These exceptions present the controverted issue in substance and effect, upon which the conviction of the accused was secured. If the court was right in the disposition made of them, then there seems to be nothing in the case, or in the other rulings made, that can be of any positive benefit to the prisoner, and that it was right appears to result from the circumstance that he acquired only the bare possession of, without the title to, the property, with the authority to sell it for the benefit of another person who continued to be the owner. The case was delivered to the jury upon the theory that they could only convict in case it had been established that the prisoner obtained this possession, intending to deprive the owner of his property in the goods and to misappropriate their proceeds, and by their verdict of guilty, they must have been satisfied of the existence of that intent; and as they found it to have been proven it was a criminal intent and sufficient to constitute the crime of larceny.
In the case of Smith v. People (53 N. Y., 111), it was held that “the proposition is elementary that larceny may be committed of goods obtained from the owner by delivery, if it be done animo furandi.” “ The rule is, that when the delivery of goods is made for a certain special and particular purpose, the possession is still supposed to reside, not parted with, in the first proprietor.” (Smith v. People, 53 N. Y., 113.) “A distinction is made between a bail charge, or special use of the goods, and a general bailment, and it is not larceny if the owner intends to part with the property and deliver the possession absolutely, although he has been induced to part with • the goods by fraudulent means. If, by trick or artifice, the owner of property is *400induced to part with tbe custody or naked possession to one wbo receives tbe property animo furandi, tbe owner still meaning to retain tbe right of property, tbe taking will be larceny; but if the owner part with not only tbe possession but tbe right of property also, tbe offense of the party obtaining them will not be larceny but that of obtaining goods by false pretenses;” and then was added, what is significantly applicable to this case, that “tbe jury have found tbe hitent to steal at tbe time of taking, which is all that is required to constitute larceny, where tbe mere possession is obtained by fraud or trick.” [Smith v. People, 53 N. Y., 114.) And no different principle was advanced in tbe case of People v. McDonald (43 id., 61), nor in that of Loomis v. People (67 id., 322.) On tbe contrary, tbe principle of the last case tends to sustain tbe propriety of this conviction. Tbe representations and assurances made use of were mere artifices to conceal tbe real purposes of the person making them, which was to induce the owner to place bis property under tbe defendant’s control in order to afford him a favorable opportunity of appropriating it to bis own use, and that created tbe offense of larceny. (Weyman v. People, 11 S. C. N. Y. [4 Hun], 511.)
Tbe case of Regina v. Goodbody (34 Eng. Com. Law, 951; 8 C. & P., 665) and Regina v. Thomas (38 Eng. Com. Law, 429; 9 C. & P., 741) have been relied upon as favorable to the prisoner’s appeal. But they differ very materially from this case, in tbe fact that it did not there appear in any form that tbe accused were actuated by any criminal intent when they acquired possession of tbe ]Droperty. On tbe other band, tbe circumstances, under which tbe delivery was made, exclude tbe idea of tbe existence of any such intention.
Whether the court was right in allowing proof of the value of tbe bags, or of tbe market prices of malt, is of no particular-importance in the case; for, according to the prices mentioned in tbe inyoices, and at which tbe malt was actually sold under tbe defendant’s authority, tbe value greatly exceeded that required to create the crime of grand larceny. Neither was there error in the refusals to charge, jn tbe language of tbe several requests, that the jury should consider tbe invoices as evidence, and that tbe taking of tbe notes was evidence that a sale bad been made. Eor tbe *401learned, recorder directed the jury that they were to reflect upon every item of evidence that had been adduced in the case, whether m oral statements or papers presented ; they were the judges of all the evidence.
Other exceptions were taken, but they seem to be all subordinated to those already considered. If the case was correctly disposed of, so far as they are concerned, and it is believed, under the authorities that it was, then the prisoner has been lawfully convicted ; and the security of trade and proprietary rights, as well as as a just administration of the laws, require that the result should not bo disturbed. The judgment should therefore be affirmed.
Potter, J., concurred.