Knowledge (XXG)

Criminal conversion

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Note that the "unauthorized" use may begin after a period of authorized use, where, for example, a person rents a car then keeps it for an extra week without permission from the rental company. Another common example occurs when a person fails to report finding lost goods (including animals),
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in that it does not include the element of intending to deprive the owner of permanent possession of that property. As such, it is a lesser offense than the crime of theft. Criminal conversion specifies a type of
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The wrongful possession or disposition or another's property as if it were one's own; an act or series of acts of wilful interference, without lawful justification, with any
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The two-pronged definition of fraudulent conversion is "conversion that is committed by the use of fraud, either by obtaining the property, or in withholding it".
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in a car, never intending to keep it from the owner. Some have redefined such conduct as a specific type of theft, or another offence such as
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intending only to keep them until someone asks for their return. When the intent becomes one of keeping the property, it is a theft.
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in a manner inconsistent with another's right, whereby that other person is deprived of the use and possession of that chattel.
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Griew, Edward. The Theft Acts 1968 and 1978. Sweet and Maxwell. Fifth Edition. 1986. Paragraph 2-01 at page 12.
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systems outside England and Wales, of exerting unauthorized use or control of someone else's
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Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Ed., Garner, 1989, St Paul MN (per earlier eds, 1st Ed. 1891)
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Contempt of sovereign or statute (breach of any statutory wording as a crime)
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The former offence of fraudulent conversion was replaced by an offence of
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Until-dawn detention for being a stranger passing a night-watchman
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was superseded by the identically named offences under the
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Index

Fraudulent conversion
crime
common law
property
personal property
real property
squatting
holding over
theft
conversion
criminal law
civil law
wireless LAN
theft of services
joy ride
taking without owner's consent
England and Wales
Larceny Act 1901
Larceny Act 1916
theft
Theft Act 1968
Conversion (law)
Embezzlement
Taking without owner's consent
chattel


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