44 Pa. Super. 253 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The defendant was indicted for and convicted of the crime of fraudulent embezzlement, as executor of the will of Michael Levi, deceased. The defendant moved to quash the indictment upon the ground that it had not been found within two years after the commission of the alleged offense and, in support of this motion, contended that the Act of May 23, 1889, P. L. 48, which increased to five years the statutory period within which an indictment for the offense here charged may be found, is in contravention of that portion of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States which provides that no state shall deny to any person the equal protection of the law. The court below overruled this motion to quash, which action is the subject of the first specification of error. Counsel for the appellant argues that the period of limitation within which the crime of embezzlement by all trustees must be prosecuted was, prior to the act of 1889, two years; that the act of 1889 extended to five years the period of limitation within which executors and certain other classes of trustees might be prosecuted for fraudulent embezzlement, while it left the limitation as to certain other trustees remain, as formerly, two years, and that this distinction comes within the prohibition of the fourteenth amendment, and denies to all executors the equal protection of the law. The indictment is founded upon sec. 113 of the Act of March 31,1860, P. L. 382, defining and providing for the punishment of fraudulent embezzlement by trustees. The word “trustee,” as used in sec. 113 of the act of 1860, is given a well-defined meaning by sec. 124 of the same statute, viz.: “The word ‘trustee’ herein shall mean a trustee on some express trust created by deed,
We do not deem it necessary, in this case, to consider whether the word “trustees,” as used in the act of April 23, 1889, is to be held to have the meaning which had been expressly given to it by sec. 124 of the act of March 31, 1860, and so construed as to embrace assignees for the benefit of creditors within the classes of trustees liable to prosecution for embezzlement within five years after the adjudication of their final accounts. If it be assumed that
The Act of February 24, 1834, sec. 2, P. L. 73, imposes upon executors the duty of causing an inventory and appraisement of the decedent’s estate to be made and “to
The act of March 31, 1860, sec. 113, provides that: “If any person, being a trustee of any property for the benefit, either wholly or partially, of some other person, or for any public or charitable purpose, shall, with intent to defraud, convert or appropriate the same, or any part thereof, to or for his own use or purpose, or the use or benefit of any other person, or shall, with intent aforesaid otherwise dispose of or destroy such property, or part thereof, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” Section 124 of the statute enacts that, “the word 'property’ shall include every description of real and personal property, moneys, debts and legacies, .... and shall also include not only such property as may have been the original subject of a trust, but any property in which the same may have been converted, and the proceeds thereof.” Under the provisions of these sections it is material to prove that there was property in the hands of the trustee, for which he was liable to account in the manner provided by law, and it is equally material to produce evidence as to the person or persons, or the public or charitable use, having a beneficial interest in the property. When an executor named in a will assumes the duties of the trust he submits himself, under the law of Pennsylvania, to the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court. The property of the estate is to be disposed of according to the provisions of the will, but the orphans’ court, as to personal property,
The tenth specification of error is based on an exception to the admission of the notes of testimony of this defendant upon the hearing of the exceptions to his account in the orphans’ court. The objection was not that the evidence formerly given by this defendant could not be used against him here, but as to the manner in which his former testimony was to be proved in the present trial. The notes of testimony had been taken by a stenographer. The preliminary evidence established that the stenographer had taken the 'notes of testimony at the proceeding in the orphans’ court under an agreement of the parties that he should so take it made at the time. The stenographer testified that he had taken the testimony as it was delivered, and that the notes of the testimony were
The sixteenth and seventeenth specifications of error complain of the action of the court in refusing to permit defendant’s counsel to read to the jury certain parts of the record of the proceedings in the orphans’ court. The record was in evidence, having been offered by the commonwealth, and if it contained anything favorable to the defendant he had the right to call attention to it. Had these rulings of the court been persisted in a serious question would be presented, but the court subsequently, in good time, withdrew from its position and said to counsel for the defendant, "The auditor’s report is in evidence and has been put in evidence by the commonwealth. It can be made use of by counsel for the defendant for any purpose for which it is relevant.” And again, "The counsel for defendant may read the whole report to the jury if he so desires. The report has been offered in evidence and it can be sent out with the jury, if counsel for the defendant desires it.” The specifications are, therefore, without merit.
The witness Clara R. Auerbach, who had been employed as cashier and bookkeeper by the defendant in conducting the business, testified fully as to how the defendant, as executor, had carried on the business at the clothing store in disposing of the property of the estate of Michael Levi, deceased. She had testified fully as to what goods were in the store, what had been bought and placed in the store by the defendant, what had been sold and the various amounts received from said sales, as to all the receipts and all the expenditures and every detail as to how the business had been carried on and the results of its operation. Having thus testified the defendant attempted to go clear outside of the inquiry as to how he had disposed of the goods of the estate and introduce tes
The offer to prove by the defendant what his father, the testator, had said to him during his lifetime, as to his intention with regard to the business and what he intended to direct by his will, was properly rejected. Michael Levi, deceased, had, in fact, made a written will and that written instrument constituted the terms of the trust which this defendant had voluntarily undertaken to execute. The admission of the testimony offered would have amounted to an attempt to prove by parole a will different from that which the testator had executed, and make a new will. The nineteenth specification of error is dismissed.
Conversion, by the trustee, of a trust fund to any other use than that of the cestui que trust is prima facie fraudulent, and the failure of the trustee to pay on settlement of his account is evidence of conversion: Commonwealth v. Kaufman, 9 Pa. Superior Ct. 310; Commonwealth v. Beale, 19 Pa. Superior Ct. 434; Commonwealth v. King, 35 Pa. Superior Ct. 454. That part of the charge upon which the twenty-third, twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth specifications of error are founded was in entire harmony with the rule of evidence above stated and those specifications of error are overruled.
This defendant had failed to pay the trust funds to the parties entitled thereto upon the final settlement of his account, and there was evidence in the case amply suffi
The. judgment is affirmed and it is ordered that the defendant appear in the court below at such time as he may be there called and that he be by said court committed until he comply with that part of the sentence which had not been performed at the time this appeal was made a supersedeas.