160 Ky. 800 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
' The. appellee, Henry M. Abele, was indicted under Section 1358a of the Kentucky Statutes, for having unlawfully converted to his own use $310.25, the property of Ed E. Walker & Co.; and, the trial court having directed the jury to find the defendant not guilty, the Commonwealth appeals.
The facts are as follows:
Appellee and his father, M. Abele, constituted the firm of M. Abele & Co., fire insurance agents in Covington; and Ed. E. Walker & Co. were engaged in a like business in that city.
In the Spring of 1913, the several companies for which M. Abele & Co. acted as agent, quit doing business in Kentucky, thus leaving M. Abele & Co. without any companies in which they could place their business. The;? made an arrangement, usual between fire insurance agents, by which Ed. E. Walker & Co. agreed to take care of the business of M. Abele & Co., by issuing policies to cover the risks of the clients of M. Abele & Co.
Furthermore, it appeared from the evidence of Ed. E. Walker that M. Abele & Co. were to receive a commission upon all business thus placed by them; that the policies were written by Ed. E. Walker & Co. for M. Abele & Co.; that at the end of each month Walker & Co. sent a statement to M. Abele & Co. for premiums on policies written for them during the month; that Ed. E. Walker & Co. sent no bills for insurance written by M. Abele & Co. to anybody but M. Abele & Co.; and if any money collected by them on the policies written for them had been lost, or was not collectable, the loss fell upon M. Abele & Co. It made no difference, under the arrangement between the two firms, whether M. Abele & Co. ever collected the premiums from the parties from whom they obtained the insurance; they were indebted to Walker & Co. for the amount of these premiums, in any event.
In this way Ed. E. Walker & Co. issued ten policies of insurance to and for M. Abele & Co., the premiums thereon aggregating $310.25. Henry M. Abele collected these premiums, but failed to turn over any part thereof to Ed. E. Walker & Co.
Under this evidence the circuit judge was of opinion that the relation between the firm of M. Abele & Co. and Ed. E. Walker & Co. was that of debtor and creditor only, and that the money paid to M. Abele & Co. by their customers as premiums upon insurance policies obtained from them, was the money of M. Abele & Co., and could not have been embezzled by Henry M. Abele since his firm was not the agent of Ed. E. Walker & Co.
Judgment affirmed.