An Introduction to Municipal Law Designed for General Readers And for Students

Cover An Introduction to Municipal Law Designed for General Readers And for Students
An Introduction to Municipal Law Designed for General Readers And for Students
John Norton Pomeroy
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Thefts were manifest, if the person was taken in the act of thieving, or in the place where he committed the crime, or when seen in possession of the stolen article. All other thefts were not manifest. Persons who knowingly re- ceived and concealed stolen goods, and those who aided them, were also liable as thieves. The penalty of commit- ting a manifest theft was quadruple the value of the thing stolen, and of a theft not manifest, double the value, in either case to be recovered from the thie...f in an action. Tliis action might be brought by any person who had an interest in the safety of the thing stolen, even though he were not the owner. Robbery, or taking the property of another by force, was also considered as a species of theft, and gave rise to the same obligations.
§ 597. Damnum, or damage. — If a person through care- lessness injured or destroyed the property of another, he was liable to the owner for the amount of the damage. The element of carelessness was necessary to give rise to the obligation to make reparation, and this was applied with nice discrimination to many particular cases.


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