Theft of services

Theft of services is the legal term for a crime which is committed when a person obtains valuable services as opposed to goods by deception, force, threat or other unlawful means, i.e., without lawfully compensating the provider for these services.[1] It may also overlap with some types of fraud in which payment is made on credit, but under an assumed identity, and ultimately disavowed ("identity theft").

Types

Crimes of this sort are typically prosecuted as larceny, and may be either a misdemeanor or a felony, based upon the value of the services illegally obtained. This category encompasses a wide variety of criminal activity including tampering with (or bypassing) a utility meter so that the true level of consumption is understated, leaving a hotel or restaurant or similar establishment without paying for the service and "turnstile jumping" or other methods of evading the payment of a fare or fee when using a public transit vehicle or entering a private facility normally requiring payment (e.g., jumping over the fence at a fair or country concert). Theft of services also occurs in the taxi industry, when a passenger in a taxi flees from the taxi to avoid paying the fee.

Theft of this sort should not be confused with reasonable rejection, where, for example, a customer does not pay because the services provided were not as advertised or because the services did not meet reasonable standards of quality. For example, if a roofer installs a new roof, but the roof leaks, the customer might be able to withhold payment until the leak has been fixed. Withholding of payment without reason would be considered larceny. Although the definition of larceny is theft of personal property.

These statutes have also, on occasion, been applied in the realm of health care, when hospitals or other health care providers have pressed criminal charges against indigent, uninsured patients who were unable to pay for their treatment.[2] This scenario has prompted intense criticism, and is a key issue in the call for a major overhaul of the health care system in the United States.

References

  1. http://definitions.uslegal.com/t/theft-of-services/
  2. Lagnado, Lucette (October 30, 2003). "Hospitals Try Extreme Measures To Collect Their Overdue Debts". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones. Retrieved 14 August 2014.

See also

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