Court Opinion

ID: 9807860
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-31 20:18:14.447478+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:03:53.429713
License: Public Domain

AlleN, J.,
dissenting: The defendant is indicted for the embezzlement of two checks, one for $55.85 and the other for $1,050.
He was the manager of the branch house of the Case Machine Company at Greensboro, and there was employed by the machine company at the same branch house a cashier named Kornegay, who was under bond and whose duty it was to- receive the money and funds of the company.
As to the check for $55.85, the State offered evidence tending to prove that it was received by the defendant and placed to- the credit of his personal account in bank and checked'out by him.
The defendant admitted that he received this cheek, that he placed it to his personal account, and checked it out. He, however, testified that a few days before he received the check he had paid to- the State Treasurer the $500 automobile tax due by the Case Machine Company to the State, at the request of the machine company and of its cashier-at Greensboro, and that the cheek for $55.85 was handed to him by the cashier at Greensboro for the purpose of reimbursing him in part for the money which he had advanced.
This evidence of the defendant was not contradicted by any evidence offered by the State, although if it was! not true, all the facts were within the knowledge of Kornegay, the cashier of the machine company.
As to the check for $1,050, the evidence offered on the part of the State shows that it was turned over to the cashier of the Case Machine Company, and that he used this check and other checks to buy a New York cheek for $1,366.27, payable to the Case Machine Company, and that this latter check of $1,366.27 was transmitted to the Case Machine Company and was received and used by the company. This cheek was sent in a letter prepared by the cashier and signed by the defendant, in which the Case Machine Company was requested to credit the account of T. L. Bland with $1,275.83 of the amount. Bland had bought a machine for cash and he owed no account to which the amount could be credited.
*952The. defendant testified that he did not know 'that this request to credit the account of Bland was in the letter; that the letter was prepared by the cashier and, with other letters prepared by him, placed on his desk for signature, and that he signed the letter in the ordinary course of business. This was not contradicted by Kornegay, the cashier.
The State also offered evidence of several officers of the machine company to the effect that after the defendant was discharged by the company he went to Racine and in conversation with them he admitted that he had used moneys belonging to the 'company amounting to about $5,000, although they say he denied that he had embezzled any of the money or funds of the company, and they do not say that either of the checks mentioned in the indictment was referred to.
The defendant admitted that he had a conversation with the officers of the company in Racine, but he denied telling, them that he had used any money or property of the company. He says that he was indebted to the company in the sum of $5,000 or $6,000 for automobiles bought from the company in the regular course of business, and with the knowledge of the officers of the company, and that he went to Racine for the purpose of asking for time in which to pay; that after he left Racine he went to see several of his relatives for the purpose of borrowing the money with which to pay the company; that he was unable to do so, and’that when he was arrested he was at work in a regular business, and that it was his intention to pay the company all he awed it.
The defendant introduced sixteen witnesses who testified to his good character, and no witnesses were introduced to prove the contrary.
On this evidence I think the defendant was entitled to an instruction that if the jury believed the evidence they ought to acquit the defendant, because as to the first check of $55.85, the uncontradicted evidence shows that he received it from the cashier to reimburse him for moneys that he had advanced for the machine company, and as to the second check, the defendant received no benefit from it, did not convert it to his own use, and it was sent to the machine company, whose property it was, and used by it.
His Honor instructed the jury, among other things, as follows: “The court instructs you, as a matter of law, that if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that this defendant, as a branch house manager, in that capacity, by reason of that position and in connection with the company, received this check for $1,050, and that it was the property’ of the company, it came into his hands in that relationship, and then, with the intent to defraud and deceive the company, did wrongfully and feloniously misrepresent the facts about it to the company, and, made a statement to the company to the effect that it was the proceeds of another collection — I say, with the intent to *953deceive and cheat and defraud the company, did transmit to them this money as ostensible payment of the Bland automobile, a cash sale, when it was in truth and in fact the sale of the Brasington automobile, and you find that in thait way he so misappropriated and misapplied the funds of the company, and so applied, without the company’s knowledge, misleading the company about the facts, the money from the Brasing-ton automobile in satisfaction of the sale of the Bland automobile, then v,pon such finding of facts, if you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, I charge you as a matter of law it would be your duty to find the defendant guilty
1 think this instruction erroneous, for two reasons:
In the first place, he charges the jury that the defendant can be convicted under the bill of indictment if he misapplied and misappropriated the two checks, and the bill of indictment does not charge a misapplication or misappropriation.
The language of the indictment is that the defendant did “fraudulently, unlawfully, and feloniously take, make away with, and secrete with intent to embezzle and fraudulently convert to his own use the property, and then and there fraudulently, unlawfully, and feloniously convert to his own use and embezzle the said property; and the jurors aforesaid, and upon their oaths aforesaid, do say, that the said O. 0. Klingman then and there in manner and form aforesaid, did fraudulently, unlawfully, and feloniously embezzle and convert to his own use the said property of the said J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company.”
In the next place, I cannot understand how a defendant can be convicted of embezzling and converting property to his own use when he has not used the property and when it has been turned over to the owner and has been used by the owner, although he may have intentionally directed it to be applied to some other account; and the authorities seem to support this position, and I find none to the contrary.
In Commonwealth v. Este, 140 Mass., 219, the treasurer of a town obtained money from a bank on a promissory note of the town and used the money in paying proper town charges. It was held that he could not be convicted of an embezzlement of the money, although he did not account for it to the town, and although such use of the money was contrived as a part of a scheme to defraud the town and to cover up an embezzlement of money already made or intended to be made. On page 284 of that case the Court says: “We deem it clear that whatever part was so used and intended to be used was not embezzled, even if the use was contrived as paid of a scheme to defraud the town. The fact that the payment was a means of embezzling other money in the past would not make it an embezzlement of the money paid. Neither *954would the fact that he represented it to the town (not to the payees) as a payment-of other town money; that is, as a payment from his balance on hand, and not from the notes. Embezzlement retains so much of the character of larceny that it is essential to the commission of the crime that the owner should be deprived of the property embezzled by an adverse holding or use. No doubt, questions may arise as to what is a sufficient deprivation or adverse holding, as in Commonwealth v. Mason, 105 Mass., 163, and cases cited. . . . But the principle remains, and, when property is held at every moment as and for the master’s property, fraud as to the source from which it comes, or fraudulent intent as to something else, is not a sufficient substitute for the missing element. To this extent we entirely agree with the English cases of Regina v. Poole, Dearsley & Bell, 385; Regina v. Holloway, 2 C. and K., 942, and 1 Denison, 370; and Rex v. Webb, 1 Moody, 431. We think that the fourth ruling requested should have been given. Justice to the defendant also required that a similar instruction should have been given as to- the other transaction not embraced in that request.”
The fourth ruling above referred to, which the Court says should have been given in' behalf of the defendant, is as follows: “If the jury shall find that the $1,800 received by the defendant of the Marlborough Savings Bank was used by the defendant in paying proper town charges, and he intended so to use it, then such use would not be embezzlement, although it was not accounted for in his account with the town.”
The same principle is also announced in Chaplin v. Lee, 18 Neb., 440; S. v. Schumacher, 162 Iowa, 231; Higbee v. State, 74 Neb., 331. In this last case the Court says: “Unless the owner is deprived of the thing (the money or property) involved in-the transaction, there can, of course, be no embezzlement.” Citing several cases.
In State v. Jones, 25 Idaho, 587, “The correct rule of law governing such facts is that unless the owner is deprived of the money or property involved in the transaction there can, of course, be no embezzlement. The owner must be deprived of the use of the property claimed to be embezzled by an adverse use or holding.”
A case involving the principle contended for by defendant is Gibson v. State, 13 Ga. App., 459, rehearing denied 23 September, 1913. Gibson was elected tax collector of Brooks County, Georgia, to- fill the unexpired term of his deceased father, who had held that office for many years. At the time he was inducted into office there was a shortage in the accounts of his father of several thousand dollars which had been collected as taxes for 1908, In 1909 the- defendant Gibson *955collected tbe taxes for that year and applied them to tbe settlement of tbe shortage of 1908. In tbe summer of 1910 Gibson was called upon for a settlement, but he was unable to comply with this demand because tbe funds bad been applied as collection upon tbe accounts of bis father for tbe year 1908. He was thereupon indicted for embezzlement, tried and convicted, and upon appeal tbe judgment was reversed. Among other things, tbe Court says: “Tbe single proposition upon which we base our ruling is that one cannot be shown to be guilty of embezzlement who has paid over all tbe money which be has collected to tbe person to whom it is due, even though be may have paid it upon tbe wrong account. Tbe record shows that every dollar collected by this defendant was paid by him, either to tbe county of Brooks if it was county tax, or to- the Comptroller-General if it was a State tax. It is true, be directed that the money be applied to tbe shortage of his deceased father, in tbe effort to preserve tbe memory of that father from disgrace; but, after all, tbe county of Brooks and tbe State of Georgia received every dollar be collected, and it requires nothing more than tbe application of these payments to tbe proper account to correct the wrong, if any, done by tbe defendant.”
Tbe defendant seems to have been found guilty upon tbe general idea that be has done something wrong, without regard to' tbe charge in tbe indictment, and it is only in this way, as I see it, that tbe conviction can be sustained.
Hoke, J., concurs.