10 Ga. App. 470 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Basley was a servant upon the farm of Nobles in Dooly county. Nobles agreed to advance him $21, and -Basleyagreed to go to Macon and use this money in transporting his wife and household goods to Dooly county. On Wednesday Nobles gave him five five-dollar bills in Dooly county, and Basley agreed that he would get the money changed in Macon, where he Was going, and repay the four dollars the next Friday, on his return. He eon- ' verted the whole amount to his own use. He was convicted of simple larceny, under an accusation charging that offense.
The ease seems to fall squarely within that of Mobley v. State, 114 Ga. 544 (40 S. E. 728), where it was held: “When a master entrusts to his servant a bill for the purpose of getting the same changed and bringing back the change to the former, and the latter fraudulently appropriates the bill to his own use and does not return either it or the change, he is guilty, not of simple larceny, but of larceny after trust.” The distinction between the case in -hand and cases like Finkelstein v. State, 105 Ga. 617 (31 S. E. 589), and Walker v. State, 9 Ga. App. 863 (72 S. E. 446), was pointed out in the 'Mobley case. In those cases no fiduciary relation existed between the owner of the money and the thief, and there was no bailment in a legal sense. In contemplation of law, the legal possession never passed out of the owner. Here there was a technical trust to a person standing in a fiduciary relation, and both the actual and legal possession had been voluntarily surrendered, without any fraud or artifice on the part of the person en-. trusted, other than that involved in the promise to repay the money at a stated time. Cunnegin’s case in the 118 Ga. 125 (44 S. E. 846), Martin v. State, 123 Ga. 478 (51 S. E. 334), and Bryant v. State,