155 Mass. 523 | Mass. | 1892
This is a complaint for embezzlement of money. The case for the government is as follows. The defendant was employed by one Sullivan to sell liquor for him in his store. Sullivan sent two detectives to the store, with marked money of Sullivan’s, to make a feigned purchase from the defendant. One
We must take it as settled that it is not larceny for a servant to convert property delivered to him by a third person for his master, provided he does so before the goods have reached their destination, or something more has happened to reduce him to a mere custodian ; Commonwealth v. King, 9 Cush. 284; while, on the other hand, if the property is delivered to the servant by his master, the conversion is larceny. Commonwealth v. Berry, 99 Mass. 428. Commonwealth v. Davis, 104 Mass. 548.
This distinction is not very satisfactory, but it is due to historical accidents in the development of the criminal law, coupled, perhaps, with an unwillingness on the part of the judges to enlarge the limits of a capital offence. 2 Leach, (4th ed.) 843, 848, note; 1 Leach, (4th ed.) 35, note; 2 East, P. C. 568, 571.
The history of it is this. There was no felony when a man received possession of goods from the owner without violence. Glanv., bk. 10, c. 13. Y. B. 13 Edw. IV. 9, pl. 5. 3 Co. Inst. 107. The early judges did not always distinguish clearly in their language between the delivery of possession to a bailee and the giving of custody to a servant, which indeed later judges some times have failed to do. E. g. Littleton in Y. B. 2 Edw. IV. 15, pl. 7. 3 Hen. VII. 12, pl. 9. Ward v. Macauley, 4 T. R. 489, 490. When the peculiar law of master and servant was applied either to the master’s responsibility or to his possession, the test seems to have been whether or not the servant was under the master’s eye, rather than based on the notion
The last mentioned decisions made it necessary to consider with care what more was necessary, and what was sufficient, to reduce the servant to the position of a mere custodian. An obvious case was when the property.was finally deposited in the place of deposit provided by the master, and subject to his control, although there was some nice discussion as to what constituted such a place. Regina v. Reed, Dears. C. C. 257. No doubt a final deposit of money in the till of a shop would have the effect. Waite’s case, 2 East, P. C. 570, 571; S. C. 1 Leach, (4th ed.) 28, 35, note. Bull’s case, 2 East, P. C. 572; S. C. 2 Leach, (4th ed.) 841, 842. The King v. Bazeley, 2 East, P. C. 571, 574; S. C. 2 Leach, (4th ed.) 835, 843, note. Regina v. Wright, Dears. & Bell, 431, 441. But it is plain that the mere physical presence of the money there for a moment is not conclusive while the servant is on the spot and has not lost his power over it: as, for instance, if the servant drops it, and instantly picks it up
It follows from what we have said, that the defendant’s first position cannot be maintained, and that the judge was right in charging the jury that, if the defendant before he placed the money in the drawer intended to appropriate it, and with that intent simply put it in the drawer for his own convenience in keeping it for himself, that would not make his appropriation of it just afterwards larceny. The distinction may be arbitrary, but, as it does not affect the defendant otherwise than by giving him an opportunity, whichever offence he was convicted of, to contend that he should have been convicted of the other, we have the less uneasiness in applying it.
With regard to the defendant’s second position, we see no ground for contending that the detective in his doings was a servant of Sullivan, or that he had not a true possession of the money, if that question were open, which it is not. The only question reserved by the exceptions is whether Sullivan’s ownership of the money prevented the defendant’s act from being embezzlement. It has been supposed to make a difference if the right of possession in the chattel converted by the servant has vested in the master previous to the delivery to the servant by the third person. 1 Eng. Crim. Law Com’rs Rep. (1834), 31, pl. 4. But this notion, if anything more than a defective statement of the decisions as to delivery into the master’s barge or cart, (Rex v. Walsh, 4 Taunt. 258, 266, and Regina v. Reed, ubi supra,) does not apply to a case like the present, which has been regarded as embezzlement in England for the last hundred years. Bull’s case, stated in The King v. Bazeley, 2 Leach, (4th ed.) 835, 841; S. C. 2 East, P. C. 571, 572. The King v. Whittingham, 2 Leach, (4th ed.) 912. The King v. Headge, 2 Leach, (4th ed.) 1033; S. C. Russ. & Ry. 160. Regina v. Gill, Dears. C. C. 289. If we were to depart from the English decisions, it would not be in the way of introducing further distinctions. See Commonwealth v. Bennett, 118 Mass. 443, 454.
Exceptions overruled.