7 S.E.2d 45 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. "If a person, fraudulently intending to get possession of the money of another and appropriate the same to his own use, by false representations induces the owner to deliver the money to him for the purpose of being applied for the owner's use or benefit, and then appropriates it in pursuance of the original intent, he is guilty of both larceny after trust delegated and simple larceny, and may be prosecuted for and convicted of either offense." Martin v. State,
2. "Trusts are implied . . Where, from any fraud, one person obtains the title to property which rightly belongs to another." Code, § 108-106 (2). Thus our Code expressly recognizes a trust which arises ex maleficio and a trustee ex maleficio. In relationship to the money obtained by the trick or scheme or fraud, such as is indicated in said section, in order to prevent the defendant from taking advantage of his own wrong, a naked, constructive, ex maleficio trust was imposed by operation of law, and the defendant became a trustee ex maleficio for the property in his hands, obtained by such fraud and trickery known as the "telegram racket." *591
3. The defendant with others was charged in the indictment "with the offense of larceny after trust; for that said accused, . . having been then and there entrusted by Andre Wallach, with the sum of sixteen hundred ninety and no/100 ($1690.00) dollars in money of the value of sixteen hundred ninety and no/100 ($1690.00) dollars and the property of said Andre Wallach, did, after having been so entrusted, wrongfully, fraudulently, and feloniously convert said sum of money to their, the accused's, own use." The attacks on the indictment, that it does not allege the "character and purpose of the bailment," or that the bailment was "for some specific purpose in which the bailor was to receive the benefit," nor does it "set out what purpose the money was to be used for the use and benefit of the owner," are not meritorious when made after verdict by way of motion in arrest of judgment.
4. The evidence authorized the verdict of larceny after trust.
1. The defendant contends that neither the indictment nor the proof shows that he held the money in trust for the prosecutor; and that if he was guilty of any crime, as made out by the State, it was simple larceny instead of larceny after trust. Unquestionably the agent, Rice, held the money in question as trustee for the victim, Wallach. The money so held was to be used for certain specified purposes which were in no way connected with the defendant. The Code, § 108-416, declares: "The purchaser from a trustee, with actual or constructive notice of the trust, shall hold as trustee for the beneficiaries; if the purchase is bona fide and without notice, the purchaser shall hold the property freed from the trust." In this case, if the defendant, by a trick or a fraud or other wrongful act, obtained money from the trustee of the victim, he was, unless he had some other or better right thereto, an involuntary trustee of the thing gained, for the benefit of the person who would have otherwise had it. Farmers Traders Bank v. Kimball Milling Co.,
Thus we think that when this "constructive" trust was imposed upon the defendant in order to prevent him from profiting from his own wrong, the circumstances required him, although there was no intention of the parties to create a trust relationship, to return or reconvey the property (the money) to the victim; and when he did not do so, but converted the money to his own use, he was guilty of larceny after trust. Martin v. State,
2. The Code, § 27-1601, declares that "all exceptions which go merely to the form of an indictment shall be made before trial; and no motion in arrest of judgment shall be sustained for any matter not affecting the real merits of the offense charged in the indictment." In the instant case the defendant did not demur to the indictment, but waited until after verdict before attacking its sufficiency by way of a motion in arrest of judgment; and under the circumstances every presumption and inference is in favor of the verdict. Hence, the pleading must be construed most strongly in favor of the pleader (the State). It would be otherwise if it had been excepted to in time by special demurrer in writing. Lewis v. State,
3. The evidence authorized the verdict.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Guerry, J., concur. *595