133 Ala. 188 | Ala. | 1901
For a “clerk, agent, servant, or apprentice of any private person or persons,” to be guilty of embezzlement under the statute, - he must have fraudulently converted to his own use, or the use of another, money or property which came into his possession by virtue of his employment. — Code, § 4659.
For a conviction of the effense, it has been held, it is essential that the prosecution establish the propositions, (1), that the accused was the clerk, agent, servant, or apprentice of a private person; (2), that the money or property came into his possession by virtue of his employment; (3), that he embezzled, or fraudulently converted to his own use, or fraudulently secreted it with intent to conveid it to his own use. — Pullam v. State, 78 Ala. 31; Reeves v. State, 95 Ala. 41.
Waiving the question whether or not the defendant was. the agent of the prosecutor, and the alleged errors of the court in the exclusion of evidence offered by defendant for the purpose of showing that he was not the employe, or agent of the prosecutor, there is nothing in the evidence tending to show that defendant ever received from or for him any money which he could possibly convert or embezzle. The charge of embezzlement for which the State elected to prosecute was, that in the account which -defendant rendered for his expenses incurred while in the services of the prosecutor, there is an item, of May 9th, 1900, of 35 -cents for -one meal, paid to W. M. Bates, the contract being that prosecutor
The court, therefore, erred in not charging the jury as requested by defendant, that if they believed the evidence ¡they must find for defendant.
Reversed and remanded.