I think you should probably edit that to eleusis
1/31/2011 3:27:59 PM
so far, I'm going with flatline
1/31/2011 3:30:58 PM
it's not conversion; it's larceny. The person has taken the horse and is not allowing the owner to have the horse back. You've just proven yourself a dumbass beyond a shadow of a doubt.
1/31/2011 3:41:59 PM
lets break it down eleusisYou think that the possessor is guilty of larceny?Larceny has five elements1)trespassory taking - the possessor acquired lawful possession of the horse through a "contract" or at the least, a boarding arrangement. This element requires unlawful possession2) carrying away3) tangible personal property4) of another5) with intent to permanently deprive - the "contract" gives rise to several conclusions, none of which appear to be with intent to take away without any lawful rightWhere is there anything stated ITT that gives rise to all the elements of larceny eleusis? Or do you just get on TWW and post stupid shit without an idea of the legal definition of the term? Where do you give advice which is legally relevant or even correct?
1/31/2011 3:44:33 PM
1/31/2011 3:46:29 PM
1/31/2011 3:47:39 PM
what about trespass to chattels? sounds like it depends on what happened back in September which we haven't heard yet. how hard did your friend try and contact them?
1/31/2011 3:49:03 PM
No, that is not what the document states. Try again.She would go give the court $500, in order to get a deputy to ride out with her. He collects anything that is above what she thinks she owes him. 0? Then she has to get the court to agree with her. She is potentially out $500.[Edited on January 31, 2011 at 3:53 PM. Reason : ,]
1/31/2011 3:49:26 PM
How do you get that...
1/31/2011 3:53:03 PM
^ you are partially correct, I agree. She is going to be out ~$90 to file a lawsuit, then put up $500 to hopefully win. I do not dispute she can get the property, but she will have to pay up in order to have a legal right to do so.goodlock, correct, it could be trespass to chattels, conversion is a more serious interference with the owner's property, and is more likely in the scenario if he had a legal obligation to surrender the property and refused to do so.keep thinking eleusis.
1/31/2011 3:55:44 PM
a horse is a horseof courseof course
1/31/2011 4:06:12 PM
fucking alias trolls in the Lounge are annoying. you've gotten shit on by everyone in this thread, yet you keep at it.yes, it's larceny. the minute the horse was not made available to the owner as stated in the contract, the horse was taken through trespass. the rest of your trivial bullshit is just laughable.
1/31/2011 4:07:44 PM
I'm sorry eleusis. In North Carolina, the elements of larceny are stated above. Please walk me through and explain how those elements are met? Or do you just think if "someone wont give me my stuff" it is larceny?If a person takes possession of property lawfully, and refuses to surrender it when the owner has a right of possession, the intentional tort is that of trespass to chattels or conversion. The elements of larceny are not met. Thus, you are a fucking moron.
1/31/2011 4:14:09 PM
The real problem is that you have no fucking clue what you are talking about. Unfortunately, it does not stop you from posting comments which purport to have knowledge of the subject matter, but in truth, you are just making shit up. You just got called out.Let's go over your advice.
1/31/2011 4:56:09 PM
my advice is still the best advice in the thread. The guy in possession of the horse knows he's in the wrong, and he's not going to cause a scene in front of an officer.If you don't lie to the guy, odds are you're not going to catch the guy at home or he's going to claim to not know where the horse is. Telling him you have money for him ensures that he'll be there when you tell him to and he'll have the horse around. A person that's shady enough to cook up some halfass extortion scheme over $500 deserves to be lied to if that's what it takes to get your property back.
1/31/2011 5:41:41 PM
if he has been in possession of the horse for an extra 5 months, how is requesting boarding fees extortion?
1/31/2011 7:39:03 PM
i don't know the first thing about horses, but flatline's advice so far has been completely in-line with what i had to do when a mechanic tried to keep my car over some bullshitthe problem with eleusis' advice is that a sheriff will not just go out there and compel the guy to give you the horse because you ask them to. they are not judge and jury, they serve the court. you need the court to compel them to help recover your property.[Edited on January 31, 2011 at 7:46 PM. Reason : advice which was instruction from my lawyer]
1/31/2011 7:43:55 PM
the sheriff is only there to keep the property owner from doing something stupid and to also serve as a witness to when the guy says he has the horse. Most people aren't going to put up much of an argument when the realize they're about to get drug through court and possibly get charges against them. A sheriff will definitely escort you if you tell them you have reason to believe the safety of you or the animal is in jeopardy.If you try to take this guy to court, then he's just going to get rid of the horse.
1/31/2011 9:48:35 PM
1/31/2011 9:51:00 PM
1/31/2011 10:33:14 PM
This is not a case of larceny; criminally speaking. If X gives me their lawnmower so I can mow my lawn, I now possess the lawnmower and don't have to give it back. However, if X comes and takes the lawnmower from me (even though it belongs to him), he has committed criminal larceny.
2/1/2011 12:22:39 AM
I know you're an officer, but I don't buy that shit for a fucking second. Show me a general statute backing that up.
2/1/2011 12:28:22 AM
It's the basic elements of larceny. G.S. 14-72:1) takes personal property in the possession of another2) and carries it away3) without the consent of the possessor and4) with the intent to deprive the possessor of it use permanently5) knowing that the taker was not entitled to it Regarding element 3:"Thus a property owner may be guilty of larceny if the owner steals his or her property when it is in another person's lawful possession (North Carolina Crimes: A Guidebook on the Elements of Crime, Sixth Edition, 2007)." See also 89 N.C. 466[Edited on February 1, 2011 at 12:47 AM. Reason : g/s/p]
2/1/2011 12:44:08 AM
^If that's true, how can repossession companies do what they do?
2/1/2011 7:41:35 AM
i think the language in the contract with the finance company entitles them to do so
2/1/2011 7:46:18 AM
Its not larceny. Could probably do a civil suit on the grounds of conversion....but I don't know how this horse shit goes.[Edited on February 1, 2011 at 9:22 AM. Reason : .]
2/1/2011 9:21:49 AM
2/1/2011 10:02:03 AM
2/1/2011 10:38:19 AM
I will gladly pay you tomorrow for my horse today
2/1/2011 10:41:56 AM
2/1/2011 11:24:24 AM
Still pretty sure it's conversion and not larceny.
2/1/2011 11:37:37 AM
you redneck moron
2/1/2011 11:41:21 AM
So just to clarify: Girl buys horse. Girl gives horse to son and gets a contract saying that the Son will raise the horse for free for X period of time. The period of time expires, but Girl isn't able to get in touch with Son. Once she has Father gets involved and says "if you want the horse back, that'll be $500"?So, I'm no lawyer, but doesn't that ultimately come down to exactly what the father is saying she owes money for? Assuming the Son was 18+, the father would have no claim to any money from her for raising the horse. The only thing he could claim is that he boarded the horse from October to now, but if she can show she made a good faith attempt to contact the son and couldn't (which will be a stretch if she knew where the barn was), then he might not even have those grounds.That doesn't seem to be the case though. It sounds like she maybe made a half-ass attempt to get the horse back and now it's just been sitting there for four additional months. Dude deserves to get paid for that.That said, from what little I know about horses, it doesn't seem like $500 is that outrageous a price to pay for the amount of service you've gotten.
2/1/2011 11:51:05 AM
2/1/2011 11:59:33 AM
the facts in the OP are very poorly described. I wouldn't really even attempt to decipher the meaning of the post.If there was a "free lease" and the possessor failed to return the property when the owner attempted to retrieve the animal in Sept, he would be possibly liable for conversion. He would not be able to collect board from Sept-Jan in that scenario.Still assuming a "free lease" or whatever it is, if the owner was lazy and attempted to get the horse in Dec-Jan, the possessor probably has a right to demand some boarding fees from owner before releasing the horse.
2/1/2011 12:01:54 PM
who's this flatline asshole?He's being quite the penis head in this thread.
2/1/2011 12:03:16 PM
He may be an asshole, but between him and eleusis trying to claim this is larceny, you kind of have to side with flatline.
2/1/2011 12:22:49 PM
2/1/2011 12:24:36 PM
he knows everything, duh
2/1/2011 12:28:43 PM
2/1/2011 1:06:19 PM
....backtracking itt.....
2/1/2011 2:45:01 PM
has Noen weighed in yet?
2/1/2011 3:15:20 PM
only 2/3 of my posts are made up shit. the rest are completely legitimate
2/1/2011 3:28:38 PM
Pull an OJ simpson.
2/2/2011 9:30:47 AM
kill a white girl?
2/2/2011 10:22:06 AM
If the saddle doesn't fit, you must acquit.
2/2/2011 11:10:19 AM
itt, eleusis pretends to be a lawyerdoes his expertise know no bounds??
2/2/2011 11:32:07 AM