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BREAKING BULK , a nautical See also: term for the taking out of a portion of the cargo of a See also: ship, or the beginning to unload; and used in a legal sense for taking anything out of a package or parcel, or in any way destroying its entirety
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It was thus important in connexion with the subject of bailment, involving as it did the curious distinction that where a bailee received possession of goods in a box or package, and then sold them as a whole, he was guilty only of a breach of See also: trust, but if he " broke bulk " or caused a separation of the goods, and sold a See also: part or all, he was guilty of felony
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This distinction was abolished by the See also: Larceny See also: Act 1861, which enacted that whoever, being a bailee of any See also: chattel, See also: money or valuable security, should fraudulently take or convert the same to his own use, or the use of any See also: person other than the owner, although he should not break bulk or otherwise determine the bailment, should be guilty of larceny (s
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