OPINION OF THE COURT
FELDER, Judge:The appellant was convicted by a special court-martial of robbing Miss Jutta E. Benthier and assaulting a fellow soldier in two separate incidents. He was punished under the provisions of Articles 122 and 128, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. §§ 922 and 928. The sentence imposed by the military judge and approved by the convening authority is a bad-conduct discharge, confinement at hard labor for three months, forfeiture of $250.00 a month for three months and reduction to the grade of Private E — 1.
He asserted at the trial, and before this Court, the defense of mistake of fact to the robbery charge. He explained that shortly before the robbery, he provided a German female with $132.00 for the purpose of purchasing narcotics for him. He described the money as “eighty-five dollars in American money, and the rest of it was in marks.” When she did not return with the contraband, he initiated a search for her to recover the money. Upon seeing a female that resembled her, he forcibly stole her purse worth 60 Deutsche marks. It contained 300 Deutsche marks. The appellant was apprehended immediately after the incident.
The trial judge rejected the appellant’s defense of mistake of fact. In doing so, he stated that he believed the appellant’s testimony concerning the circum*599stances surrounding the robbery but that he was convinced the appellant’s mistake in identification of the victim was unreasonable. We accord due consideration to his resolution of the facts but the legal principle the judge applied is incorrect. Since robbery consists of an assault and a larceny and larceny is a specific intent offense, an honest mistaken belief is a sufficient defense, without regard to the reasonableness of the mistake.1 United States v. Rowan, 4 U.S.C.M.A. 430, 16 C.M.R. 4 (1954).
As a general principle of law, a person is not guilty of robbery in forcibly taking property from the person of another, if he does so under a bona fide belief that he is the owner of the property. United States v. Kachoughian, 7 U.S.C.M.A. 150, 21 C.M.R. 276 (1956). The reason for this rule is that one who takes his own property or that which he believes to be his own property lacks the felonious intent required for larceny or robbery.
We reject government counsels’ notion that this principle is inapplicable to the forcible taking of funds involved in a drug transaction. They cite United States v. Petrie, 1 M.J. 332 (C.M.A.1976) and United States v. Robinson, 49 C.M.R. 183 (A.C.M.R. 1974) in support of their proposition. Petrie offers no support because it concerns an accused who attempted to rob the victim of contraband and when he was unsuccessful, he stole the “victim’s money.” Neither does Robinson advance their theory because the property taken in that case was “proceeds that belonged to a drug dealer.” In both cases the offenders stole funds to which they had no legal proprietary interest. In the instant case, however, the appellant attempted to recapture the same funds that he tendered to another and to which he was legally entitled. Because of this distinguishing feature, he benefits from the rule in United States v. Kachougian, supra.
Since the judge was convinced that the appellant’s mistaken belief was honest, he should have acquitted him of robbery of the Deutsche marks, at least to the converted value of $132.00.2 In recovering money under this claim-of-right theory, it is not necessary that the identical money be recaptured. See People v. Rosen, 11 Cal.2d 147, 78 P.2d 727 (1938). However, the law does not excuse the appellant of assaulting the victim. The right to recapture does not include the right to exercise violence as a method of enforcement. Further, the conviction for robbery of the purse may be sustained because the appellant had no proprietary right to it.
Accordingly, only so much of the finding of guilty of the Charge and its specification as finds that the appellant did, at Hanau, Germany, on or about 24 October 1977, by means of force and violence, steal from the person of Jutta E. Benthier against her will, a purse, of a value of about 60 Deutsche marks ($20.00), the property of the said Jutta E. Benthier, in violation of Article 122, Uniform Code of Military Justice, is affirmed. The remaining findings of guilty are affirmed. Reassessing the sentence on the basis of the above-indicated error, our action herein and the entire record, the Court affirms the sentence.
Senior Judge MITCHELL concurs.. The honest and reasonable standard in the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 200a (6), was not included in the revised edition.
. This is the amount the appellant lost. There is no evidence in the record of the relative value of Deutsche marks to dollars at the time the offense was committed. However, the specification indicates that 300 DM were valued at $135.00.