Loss of something of value due to a dishonest act Last Updated: 4/17/97 Send Comments to ingebrig@plains nodak edu Return to the Retailer Education Project
The act of stealing; specifically, the felonious taking and removing of personal property, with an intent to deprive the rightful owner of the same; larceny
Including attempted theft and loss of property from a known place when it is likely that the property has been stolen This peril does not include loss caused by theft: (a) committed by the insured; (b) in or to a dwelling under construction, or of materials and supplies for use in the construction until the dwelling is finished and occupied; or (c) from that part of a residence premises rented by an insured to other than an insured This peril does not include loss caused by theft that occurs off the residence premises of: (a) property while at any other residence owned by, rented to or occupied by an insured except while an insured is temporarily living there Property of a student who is an insured is covered while at a residence away from home of the students had been there at any time during the 45 days immediately before the loss; (b) watercraft, and their furnishings, equipment and outboard engines or motors; or (c) trailers and campers
Theft is the crime of stealing. Art theft is now part of organised crime. In law, the crime of taking the property or services of another without consent. Under most statutes, theft encompasses the crimes of larceny, robbery, and burglary. Larceny is the crime of taking and carrying away the goods of another with intent to steal. Grand larceny, or larceny of property of substantial value, is a felony, whereas petty larceny, or larceny of less valuable property, is a misdemeanour. The same principle applies to grand theft and petty theft, which need not necessarily involve the "carrying away" of property and may include the theft of services. Robbery is an aggravated form of larceny involving violence or the threat of violence directed against the victim in his presence. Burglary is defined as the breaking and entering of the premises of another with an intent to commit a felony within. Two offenses usually distinguished from theft are embezzlement and fraud
In Crime Insurance, a broad term encompassing any unlawful taking of property, including burglary and robbery Usually excludes employee dishonesty and mysterious disappearance
Punished by restitution, the proportions of which are noted in 2 Sam 12: 6 If the thief could not pay the fine, he was to be sold to a Hebrew master till he could pay (Ex 22: 1-4) A night-thief might be smitten till he died, and there would be no blood-guiltiness for him (22: 2) A man-stealer was to be put to death (21: 16) All theft is forbidden (Ex 20: 15; 21: 16; Lev 19: 11; Deut 5: 19; 24: 7; Ps 50: 18; Zech 5: 3; Matt 19: 18; Rom 13: 9; Eph 4: 28; 1 Pet 4: 15)
Theft Act 1968, s 1 (1) "A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it; and thief and steal shall be construed accordingly
The willful taking of one person's property by another, wrongfully To recover indemnity, an intent permanently to deprive the owner of his/her property need not be established for there to be a theft under the policy
thefts
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thefts
Telaffuz
/ˈᴛʜefts/ /ˈθɛfts/
Etimoloji
[ 'theft ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English thiefthe, from Old English thIefth; akin to Old English thEof thief.