Summary
Judgment reversed. Banke, Acting P. J., and Carley, J., concur.
Summary
Judgment reversed. Banke, Acting P. J., and Carley, J., concur.
Text
Farrar & Farrar, Archibald A. Farrar, Jr., for appellant.
Appellant, Dyer, was convicted of theft by receiving stolen property. On appeal he enumerated nine errors by the trial court. In Enumeration 3, he contends that the trial court erred because the verdict is contrary to law and principles of justice and equity. A review of the record shows that at the trial the state proceeded to establish the elements of the crime of theft by taking as defined in Code Ann. 26-1802 rather than theft by receiving stolen property as defined in Code Ann. 26-1806. We find this to be a fatal variance between the allegata and probata and must reverse and remand for action consistent with this opinion.
Dyer and two companions were on a public road attempting to start a car when they were observed by an individual who recognized the car as fitting the description of one reportedly used to sell items previously stolen from him. The police were notified and asked Dyer and his companions to drive to the police station. The owner of the car consented to a search of the trunk which disclosed several items reported to have been stolen from Alabama. An accomplice, Roan, testified at the trial that he had accompanied Dyer and another man to Lake Lahusage, Alabama and that they had broken into two different cabins and stolen the items found in the trunk of their car when it was searched.
The essence of the crime of theft by receiving stolen property is that "the defendant, with knowledge of the facts and without intent to return it to the owner, bought or obtained property which had been stolen by some person other than the defendant." Clark v. State,
The Georgia Supreme Court and this court have adopted these standards. DePalma v. State,
The instant case does not meet these criteria. Conviction of theft by receiving stolen property in Summerville, Georgia would not prevent Dyer from being prosecuted for theft by taking at Lake Lahusage, Alabama. Accordingly, the variance is fatal.
William M. Campbell, District Attorney, James A. Meaney, III, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
1979
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