188 Ind. 592 | Ind. | 1919
— Appellant was charged by affidavit ’ and convicted in the Clay Circuit Court of a crime defined by §2425 Bums 1914, Acts 1905 p. 584, §519. The section cited defines two offenses. The first part of the section makes it a felony for any person to pay any money or to deliver anything of value to any persons holding certain offices named therein, for the purpose of obtaining any contract for the construction of certain public buildings and other works of a public nature named therein, or for the performance of any work or the furnishing of any material to any state, county, town, or city, over which such person has any jurisdiction. Appellant was charged and convicted of the offense defined by the last part of the section which pro
The affidavit charged that, at the time mentioned therein, Carl A. Biller was the legally elected and acting township trustee of Posey township in Clay county, Indiana, and that on or about the-day of June, 1917, as such trustee, Carl A. Biller entered into a contract with Earl L. Clevenger, agent of the Hoosier Warming and Ventilating Company, to repair the heating furnaces in the township high, school building near Staunton, in said Posey township for said school township. It was further charged in the affidavit that on or about January 23, 1918, in the county of Clay and the State of Indiana, the said Earl L. Clevenger having said contract as aforesaid did then and there, unlawfully, feloniously and corruptly pay to said Carl A. Biller, trustee, as aforesaid, forty dollars lawful money of the United States of America as a percentage, reward, drawback, premium and profit on such contract, contrary to the form of the statute.
The sufficiency of the affidavit was questioned by a motion to quash and also by a motion in arrest of judgment, both of which motions were overruled.
The witness Biller testified that appellant paid him forty dollars at his office in Staunton on January 22, 1918, at the time witness paid the balance on the heating repairs, and that appellant said that the balance due witness was ninety-five dollars, which he would pay when witness paid for the pump which had been ordered. This was the only evidence as to the payment of any money by appellant to Biller in Clay county, Indiana. Appellant denied, making this payment, and further stated that on the day the settlement was made he and two other men, Limbaugh and Gordon, went from the Davis Hotel in Brazil, Indiana, directly to the office of Biller in Staunton; that it was a very cold day; that both these men went into the office with him and remained there during the time he was engaged in making the settlement and collecting the balance due on' the heating repairs; and that, after his business was concluded, one of the other men showed some plans to Mr. Biller and .talked over some contemplated repairs to the school building, after which they all left the office together. Both Gordon and Limbaugh were produced as witnesses at the trial, and they both corroborated appellant as to the facts just stated. They both further testified that, during the entire time appellant was in the office, they sat by the stove only four or five feet from the desk where the business was transacted, and
The testimony of the witness Biller shows that, after the contract for the repairs to the heating plant was entered into, he met appellant in Terre Haute, Indiana, and had a conversation with him in which the repairs were discussed and in which appellant said that he would treat him right and give him ten per cent, of all the work, and asked him if that would be satisfactory, and that witness assented to that arrangement. Biller’s evidence also shows that he later gave appellant an order for a pump on which contract appellant agreed to pay him fifty dollars, stating that this amount together with his percentage on the heating repairs would make the amount due him $200. About September 22, 1917, ac
At the proper time appellant tendered instruction No. 5, which the court refused to give, and did not give any instruction covering the proposition stated therein. This ruling of the court was assigned as a cause for new trial and is presented for review on- appeal. The instruction so tendered and refused is in the following words: “The court instructs the jury that it is the law of this state that a defendant may never be proven guilty of one offense by proving the commission of other crimes. Evidence has been introduced in this trial as to certain alleged payments which the state claims to have been made by the defendant, Earl L. Clevenger, to Carl A. Biller, at Terre Haute, and Indianapolis, Indiana, while said Biller was township trustee of Posey township, Clay county, Indiana, and while said Clevenger had a contract with the said Biller for the repair
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Note. — Reported in 125 N. E. 41. See under (5) 62 L. R. A. 193, 12 Cyc 405, 40 Cyc 2769.