- Applies to:theft-type offenses.
- Effect:negates intent to steal.
- Standard:good-faith belief.
- Evidence:facts showing honest claim.
Claim of right is a defense to theft: you cannot be guilty of stealing property you honestly believed you had a right to take or keep. Theft requires the intent to take another person's property without a legal right to it. If you genuinely believed the property was yours, or that you were legally entitled to it, you lacked that intent. Here's how the defense works and where its limits are.
Claim of Right Negates Theft Intent
The crime of theft turns on intent — specifically, the intent to deprive another of property the taker has no right to. An honest claim of right attacks that intent directly. If you took or kept property because you genuinely believed it belonged to you, or that you had a legal right to it, you did not have the criminal state of mind theft requires.
What this means for you: This is not a technicality. It goes to whether the State can prove an essential element of theft. If your honest belief in your right is left standing, the theft case should fail.
The Belief Must Be Honest — and Usually Reasonable
The defense depends on a genuine, good-faith belief in your right to the property. A belief that is a pretext, or that no reasonable person could hold, will not carry the defense. The more grounded and documented the belief — a receipt, a contract, a history of ownership, a genuine dispute over who owns something — the stronger it is.
Common Situations
- Disputed ownership. Two people genuinely disagree about who owns an item, and one takes it believing it's theirs.
- Repossession or self-help. Taking back property you believe is rightfully yours — though the manner of doing so can create other legal problems.
- Money or property owed. Believing you were entitled to take something to satisfy a genuine debt or obligation. (This area has limits and can be charged differently.)
- Workplace or family property disputes. Honest disagreements over who owns tools, equipment, or shared property.
What this means for you: The strongest claim-of-right cases involve a real, documentable dispute over ownership or entitlement — not an after-the-fact justification.
Where the Defense Doesn't Reach
Claim of right is not a license to use force, break in, or commit other crimes in the process of reclaiming property. Even if the claim-of-right defense applies to a theft charge, conduct surrounding the taking — a confrontation, a trespass, a threat — can support separate charges. And the defense applies to the intent element of theft-type offenses; it does not transform every property dispute into a defense.
Burden of Proof
Because claim of right negates the intent the State must prove, the prosecution must still establish the required criminal intent beyond a reasonable doubt. Once the defense is properly raised with supporting evidence, the State's burden on intent remains — it does not shift to the defendant to prove ownership in the way a civil property case would.
Updated May 18, 2026 · Law verified as of June 17, 2026. This article is general information about Minnesota law, not legal advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is claim of right?
It is a defense to theft based on an honest belief that you had a legal right to the property you took or kept. That belief negates the intent theft requires.
Does the belief have to be correct?
No — it has to be honest and held in good faith, and generally reasonable. You can be mistaken about the ownership and still have the defense if your belief was genuine and reasonable.
Can I use force to take back my own property?
Be careful. Claim of right may defend a theft charge, but using force, breaking in, or threatening someone during a "self-help" repossession can lead to separate charges regardless.
Who has to prove what?
The State must prove the criminal intent element of theft beyond a reasonable doubt. A properly raised claim of right challenges that intent; the burden of proving the crime stays with the prosecution.
Does claim of right apply to crimes other than theft?
It is primarily a theft-related defense tied to the intent to take another's property. Whether a similar argument applies to a particular charge depends on the elements of that offense and should be reviewed with an attorney.
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Read the guideThe information on this article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship.