45 Mo. App. 647 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
— This was a suit commenced by attachment in the circuit court of Barton county, Missouri,
At the close of the evidence, at the request 'of the-defendant, the court instructed the jury as follows : “The plaintiff charges that the defendant has embezzled and converted to his own use property and money belonging to the plaintiff. Defendant denies the charge. It devolves upon the plaintiff to sustain its accusation by the evidence and to your satisfaction. Before you can find a verdict for the plaintiff you must believe from the evidence that at the time the defendant was in the employ of the plaintiff he wrongfully appropriated and converted to his own use the property or money of the plaintiff, and that he did so with an intent at the time of defrauding and depriving the plaintiff thereof. It is not enough that the defendant may have been found to-
After which plaintiff’s counsel addressed the jury on behalf of plaintiff, and was followed by defendant’s counsel on behalf of defendant; after which plaintiff’s counsel made the closing argument to the jury, during which he took into his hands one of the account books kept by the defendant while in the employ of plaintiff, and which purported to contain an account of all the business done by him for plaintiff while in charge of its said lumber yard, and which book had been introduced in evidence during the trial and many items therein referred to, but defendant’s attention had not been ■specially called to more than one of said erasures, and that was not the particular one the counsel was commenting on, his comments being directed to the fact that there was a great number of erasures as to cash balances, and proceeded to point out and show to the jury what appeared to be errors or alterations in some of the footings as to cash balances, and at the same time' was arguing to the jury that they should infer therefrom that such erasures or alterations were made by the defendant and that they were fraudulently and corruptly made by him. Whereupon defendant’s counsel • interrupted said argument and objected thereto for the reason that it had been shown by the evidence that said
And the court thereupon also gave to the jury the-following instruction : ‘1 The books offered in evidence were offered only for the purpose of laying the foundation for the introduction of testimony of the accountants of the result of their calculations, and not for the purpose-of showing alleged alterations therein contained. You will, therefore, not consider the same or any part-thereof in passing upon the intent of the' defendant, the same not having been called to the attention of the defendant, the court or the jury, until in the closing argument by plaintiff’s attorney.” The plaintiff brings-the case here by appeal.
The plaintiff’s first ground of appeal is that the court erred in permitting the defendant to introduce evidence in support of his general reputation, in the vicinity where he resided, for honesty and fair dealing. Judge Scott in Gutzwiller v. Lackman, 23 Mo. 168, remarked, “That the rule is stated in the books, that,.
It is further observed in this opinion, in those excepted cases, character affects the amount of the recovery. The jury are by law permitted to consider it in assessing damages, and, in that sense, it is said that the nature of the action puts the character in issue. The case of Humphrey v. Humphrey, 7 Conn. 116, was where, in a suit for divorce on the ground of adultery, it was held that evidence of defendant’s good character was inadmissible, although the evidence against her was circumstantial. The ruling in that case was quoted with approval by the learned judge who delivered the opinion in Dudley v. McCluer, just cited, and who seems to have entirely overlooked the previous well-reasoned opinion of Judge Ryland to the contrary in O'Bryan v. O'Bryan. The paragraph from Prof. G-reenleaf (section 54), which is approved as a correct statement of the rule of O'Bryan v. O'Bryan, is disapproved in Dudley v. McCluer upon the authority of Porter v. Seiler, supra. As Dudley v. McCluer was reversed upon the sole ground that the trial court erroneously received evidence of the good character of the defendant who was charged with having made false and fraudulent representations, we must conclude that the case of O'Bryan v. O'Bryan is overruled. The St. .Louis Court of Appeals in Engel v. Dressel, 26 Mo. App.
II. The instruction given for the defendant was not erroneous. The mere failure of an agent to pay over money to his principal, after he has received it for, and on account of, his principal, does not of itself constitute the crime of embezzlement, nor does the mere conversion of it by the agent to his own use after its reception, and failure to pay it over to his principal, constitute the crime of embezzlement; but there must be a felonious intent on the part of the agent at the time of the conversion to appropriate it to his own use, and deprive the owner of the ownership therein. The intent at the time of the conversion of the money to restore it at some future time, if found to exist, would be incapable of relieving the act of its criminal nature. State v. Pratt, 98 Mo. 482; State v. Jennings, 98 Mo. 493.
III. The instruction of the court given for the purpose of informing the jury for what purpose the books of the plaintiff had been introduced in evidence was not improper. It seems that those books were introduced in evidence for the sole purpose of laying the foundation for the introduction of the testimony of expert accountants in respect to the calculations and computations they had made therefrom. The alterations and erasures to which the counsel of plaintiff referred in his closing argument to the jury were not previously called to the attention of the defendant in any way so as to afford him an opportunity to explain the same if he
IY. There was no evidence, as we understand from the abstract of the record, offered by plaintiff to sustain the first ground of the attachment which was based on the twelftji subdivision of section 521, Revised Statutes. If there had been, it would have been improper under the rulings in Deering & Co. v. Collins, 38 Mo. App. 80, and Finley v. Bryson, 84 Mo. 664.
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.