CONNECTICUT STATUTES AND CODES
Sec. 52-564. Treble damages for theft.
Sec. 52-564. Treble damages for theft. Any person who steals any property of
another, or knowingly receives and conceals stolen property, shall pay the owner treble
his damages.
(1949 Rev., S. 8305; 1963, P.A. 99.)
History: 1963 act provided recovery be treble damages rather than treble the value of the property stolen.
See Sec. 53-202 re machine guns.
See chapter 952, part X, re larceny, robbery and related offenses, generally.
In a public prosecution for theft, the court will not on conviction award treble damages to the owner. 6 C. 105. Plaintiff
not bound to prove his case "beyond a reasonable doubt". 30 C. 103. Rules of evidence are the same as in any civil suit.
Id., 556. This is not a penal statute. 74 C. 135; 87 C. 468. Is constitutional. 82 C. 5. Statutory treble damages discussed.
188 C. 36. Cited. 206 C. 125. Cited. 216 C. 200. Cited. 236 C. 582. Cited. 241 C. 678. Statutory theft under section is
synonymous with larceny as provided in Sec. 53a-119. 255 C. 20. Statutory theft requires that defendant wrongfully take,
obtain or hold property of another. Id.
Cited. 1 CA 303. Cited. 8 CA 96. Cited. 11 CA 161. Cited. 18 CA 20. Cited. 33 CA 303. Cited. 37 CA 7. Cited. 42 CA
599. Cited. 43 CA 1. Cited. 45 CA 46; Id., 324. Statute synonymous with larceny under Sec. 53a-119. 47 CA 517. Liability
for conversion is a precondition to finding of liability for treble damages under section. 86 CA 527. Because count of
plaintiff's complaint alleging civil theft is devoid of any factual assertion that defendants acted with the requisite intent to
permanently deprive plaintiff of her property, plaintiff failed to state a cause of action for civil theft, and count is legally
insufficient. 99 CA 719.
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