State v. Langford Case Brief
Summary of State v. Langford, ct of App Louisiana 1985
Facts: Df opened a NOW account with the bank by depositing $5362. The account was erroneously assigned a code for unlimited overdrafts. The df attempted to secure a loan for $225,000 but was denied. He then wrote several checks, over a period of month, which overdrew the account $848,879. The bank noticed the df everyday of the overdrafts. At the end of the month he was sent a statement. Df never attempted to alleviate negative balance.
Issue: Whether the bank’s mistake granted consent to the df to deprive the bank of money?
Holding: No
Procedure: Bench trial conviction of theft. 8 yrs hard labor.
Rule: Taking money without consent and with the intent to deprive permanently of the money id theft.
Ct. Rationale: The bank never consented to the df’s continued removal of money or his conduct. Df only deposited $5000 and he was denied a loan for $225,000, yet he continued to write checks with the intent to deprive permanently the bank of its money. Df received statements and overdraft notices therefor he knew a mistake was being made and could not believe these notices were invitations to keep the money.