53 Neb. 831 | Neb. | 1898
Lead Opinion
The information in this case, omitting formal parts, allegations of time, and venue, and other averments not material to the questions presented for review, was as •follows: “That Eugene Moore, * * * then and there being an officer, to-wit, auditor of public accounts of the state of Nebraska, and as such officer being charged with the collection, receipt, safe-keeping, transfer, and disbursement of the public money and a certain part thereof belonging to the state of Nebraska, and the property of the state of Nebraska, then and there unlawfully and feloniously did fraudulently convert to his own use, and embezzle of said public money the sum of twenty-three thousand, turn hundred eight dollars and five cents in money, * * the property of the state of Nebraska, which said money had then and there come into the custody and possession of said Eugene Moore by virtue of ■ his office as auditor of public accounts as fees from insurance companies then and there doing business in the state of Nebraska, for services to be performed by the said Eugene Moore as said auditor of public accounts in filing by the said Eugene Moore as said auditor the annual statements of said insurance companies and in issuing certificates of authority by the said Eugene Moore as
A suggestion made in the argument, and reflected in several places in the state’s brief, is that the plea admitted the moral guilt of the defendant, and, to quote the last sentence of the brief, “having pleaded guilty to all the charges of the information, this court may well hesitate before reversing his plea, and say he is not guilty after he has said he is guilty.” Surely the attorney general cannot mean to contend that because the defendant has by his plea admitted the facts charged and therefore a moral delinquency, he should be punished even if the law does not denounce those facts as a criminal offense. The question before us is not one of moral delinquency, but simply whether the facts charged in the information constitute a crime under the laws of this state. Defendant stands in no worse position in this respect than he would on a demurrer to the information, which would, for the purposes of the proceeding, involve the same admission.
While there are several different sections of the Criminal Code relating to embezzlement by different classes of persons, it is conceded that the information in this case was drawn with a vieAV to section 124, and that it does not charge an offense against any other section. Section 124, so far as it is material, is as follows: “If any officer or other person charged Avith the collection, receipt, safe-keeping, transfer, or disbursement of the public money, or any part thereof, belonging to the state, or to any county or precinct, organized city or village, or
In 1873 there was passed an act relating to insurance companies, section 32 of which was as follows: “There shall be paid by every company, association, person or persons, agent- or agents, to whom this act shall apply, the following fees: For filing and ■ examination of the first application of any company, and issuing of the certificate of license thereon, fifty dollars, Avhich shall go to the auditor; for filing each annual statement herein re
The state asserts that if that be the effect of the constitution, the defendant was nevertheless charged with the safe-keeping and transfer of these fees, he having in fact received them. It is said that the embezzlement statute, does not require that the person charged should be charged with the duty by statute, but that he may be charged in any one of four Avays — by the constitution, by decisions of this court on equitable grounds, by the common law, and by statute. It will be seen that this is only another method of saying that he must in some way be charged by law. Let us assume the correctness of this analysis and see to what result it leads; for convenience, however, not proceeding exactly in the order indi-.
The first proposition receives, at first impression, support from the cases of State v. Leidtke and State v. Wallichs, already referred to. Both were original applications for Avrits of mandamus, addressed to this court, both were submitted without briefs, and both serve to
That where an officer receives money which he is not by law authorized to receive, such money is not received by him in his official capacity, and that any duty which he may owe of paying the money is only that which rests upon any debtor or bailee, is established by many cases.
San Luis Obispo County v. Farnum, 108 Cal. 562, was an action on the bond of a county auditor to whom a tax collector had paid money which should have gone to the treasurer. The court said: “That the money in question, having been collected by the tax collector for licenses, belonged to the county is not questioned; but that it came to the hands of the defendant Farnum as auditor is a conclusion of law 'wholly unsupported by the facts found. * * Having received the money, it was Farnum’s duty to pay it over to the treasurer; but such duty did not arise out of his office, nor was it at all different from the duty which would have rested upon him to pay it over had he been a plain citizen not holding any county office.” (See also People v. Pennock, 60 N. Y. 421; Orton v. City of Lincoln, 41 N. E. Rep. [Ill.] 159; Lowe v. City of Guthrie, 44 Pac. Rep. [Okla.] 198; Warswick v. State, 35 S. W. Rep. [Tex.] 386; State v. Johnson, 49 Ia. 141; People v. Cobb, 51 Pac. Rep. [Colo.] 523; People v. Hilton, 36 Fed. Rep. 172; Rex v. Thorley, Moody C. C. [Eng.] 343; State v. Moeller, 48 Mo. 331; Rex v. Hawlin, 7 C. & P. [Eng.] 281.)
A case very similar arose in Kansas, the question there being whether a certificate issued to an insurance company was valid where the auditor had made a draft for the money, then issued the certificate, and, after the proceeds of the draft were received, paid the money into the treasury. The court held that the Certificate was.void, saying: “The much more serious error is found in the declaration that the auditor acted as the agent of the state in drawing the draft, or in receiving the money when it was paid. The limits of an officer’s authority are
The statute of Ohio was precisely like ours with reference to embezzlement of public funds, and the supreme court of that state held that it did not extend to a county auditor because he was not as such charged with the collection and receipt of money. (State v. Newton, 26 O. St.
Nor do we think that there is any principle of estoppel whereby the defendant is forbidden to deny that he is within the class against which the penalties of the statute are denounced. For the purposes of this case we need hot inquire whether the same rules apply as to e'stoppel in civil and in criminal cases, or whether a man may ever be estopped to plead the law. The cases cited as applying estoppels are for the most part cases where an officer charged by law with the • duty of collecting taxes has actually collected them and then refused to turn them over because illegally levied. There the general duty of collecting the money Avas imposed by law on the officer. The money was paid. The legality of the tax was a question solely between the public and the taxpayer, and the latter having voluntarily paid the tax, it Avas no affair of the collector whether he might have resisted the payment or not. The matter was not one of an estoppel. The issue was merely immaterial. No one could defend a charge of embezzlement as the agent of an individual, on the ground that a third person had paid money Avhich he did not owe and could not have been compelled to pay; but there is a multitude of cases holding that he may defend if he had no authority to receive payment at all. Akin to these cases are those where a foreign corporation is prohibited from doing business except on compliance with certain requirements, and an agent embezzles its funds, and alleges in defense that the princi
Reversed and dismissed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I do not concur in the conclusion of the majority and give here the reasons for my dissent.
The constitution of 1875 not only repealed that part of section 32 of the insurance law which authorized the auditor to appropriate to his own use the fees therein specified, but repealed, as well, so much of the section as authorized him to receive such- fees for any purpose. These fees were, by the provisions of the constitution, required to be paid into the treasury of the state in ad
It is settled by a long line of decisions in other states that taxes or other public revenues collected by an officer acting under color of an unconstitutional law or void ordinance belong not to himself, but to the municipal or political corporation whose commission he bears. (Chandler v. State, 1 Lea [Tenn.] 296; Village of Olean v. King, 116 N. Y. 355; Swan v. State, 48 Tex. 120; Morris v. State, 47 Tex. 583; Waters v. State, 1 Gill [Md.] 302; Commonwealth v. City of Philadelphia, 27 Pa. St. 497; Middleton v. State, 120 Ind. 166; Mayor v. Harrison, 30 N. J. L. 73.) Here the defendant, acting under color of a statute originally valid, but repealed in part by implication on the adoption of the present constitution, collected fees due the state for official services rendered by him as auditor of public accounts; and now, after having rendered services to the insurance companies as the agent of the state, and after having assumed to act for the state in collecting the fees due for such services, he cannot be heard to deny that the fees so collected and received belong to, and are the property of, the state. The application of the doctrine of estoppel to the facts in this case has made the money in question the money of the state; and it must be so regarded whether its title be drawn in question in a civil or in a criminal case. The law does not require us to hold to-day in a criminal action that it is not the state’s money, and to-morrow in a civil action that it is. In the case of State v. Spaulding, 24 Kan. 1, it was held that where a city officer, pursuant to a custom
But was the defendant one of the persons against whom section 124 of the Criminal Code is directed? Whatever may be the rule in other jurisdictions, the question is no longer an open one,in this state. It has been effectually set at rest by the decision in the case of State v. Leidtke, 12 Neb. 171. The language of the section, “any officer or other person charged with the collection, receipt, safe-keeping, transfer, or disbursement of. the public money,” etc. (Criminal Code, sec. 124), is, unquestionably, descriptive of the persons.who may be punished under its provisions, and is, therefore, descriptive of the offense. It is, of course, true that the defendant was not charged' by any valid law with the collection or receipt of the moneys here in question, but (having collected and received them under color of his office, it became his duty to safely keep them and transfer them to the treasury of the state. And this was not, as intimated in the case of San Luis Obispo County v. Farnam, 108 Cal. 562, 41 Pac. Rep. 445, a duty due from him as a private citizen, but one arising out of, and resulting from, his official station. Upon this point the Leidtke Case is direct authority; for, by ihe judgment of this court, a peremptory writ of mandamus was awarded against Leidtke to compel him to pay to the state treasurer fees collected by him as auditor under the provisions .of section 32 aforesaid. The writ could not have issued against, him as a mere private debtor of the state. It could have issued only to coerce the performance of an official duty. (Thatcher v. Adams County, 19 Neb. 485; Laflin v. State, 49 Neb. 614.)
I am not prepared to say that I should agree to the rule established by the Leidtke Case were the question now-presented for the first time. But that decision has stood unchallenged for nearly twenty years. It may be contrary to the weight of authority, but it has the support of