41 How. Pr. 293 | New York Court of Sessions | 1871
The evidence established the following facts: —The defendant, a boot and shoe maker, residing in the city of Brooklyn, was occasionally employed as such by the prosecutor who was a shopkeeper in the business of manufacturing and selling boots and shoes in the city of New York, to manufacture. for him, he furnished the materials ready cut and prepared for manufacture, the defendant taking those materials to his own house and returning the work when completed. He was not paid regular wages; his compensation depending upon and being regulated by the quantity of work performed at fixed prices, and payment to be made on the completion and return of the work as agreed on.
He was not permanently or exclusively employed by the prosecutor, but did such other work in addition to that furnished by him as he could obtain.
The statute defining the offense of embezzlement, declares that, u if any clerk or servant of any private person, or of " any copartnership, (except apprentices and persons within the age of eighteen years,) or if any officer, agent, clerk or servant of any incorporate company, shall embezzle or convert to his own use, take, make away with, or secrete with intent to embezzle, or convert to his own use, any money, goods, rights of actions, or other valuable securities or effects whatever, belonging to any other person which shall have come into his possession or under his care by virtue of such employment or office, he shall upon conviction be punished in the manner prescribed by law for feloniously stealing.” &c,
The indictment in this case describes the prisoner as the clerk and the servant of prosecutor, and charges him with having embezzled u seventy-two pairs of stock for shoes.”
Embezzlement is a species of larceny, and the term is applicable to cases of furtive and fraudulent appropriation by clerks, servants or carriers of property coming into their possession by virtue of their employment, it is distinguished from larceny, properly so called, as being committed in respect of property which is not at the time in the actual possession of the owner. (See 4 Blackstone’s Com , 220, 231 ; Burrills Law Dic., vol. 1, p. 415; Barbour’s Crim. Law, 149 ; 3 Archabold’s C. P. & P., 449 ; Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 414 ; Russell on Crimes.)
To constitute larceny, it is necessary that the property
And a distinction is drawn in this country, as was formerly in England, between the case of property or money placed in the hands of the servant or clerk by the master or employer for any purpose, and the case of money or property received by the clerk or servant for the master ■from a third party. In the first case, the clerk or servant is decided to have merely the custody of the property as contra-distinguished from the legal possession, which remains in the master or employer. In the other case, as the person paying the money or delivering the property to the servant intends to part, and does part, with the possession and the temporary or permanent control of the thing delivered, and as the master acquires no possession or control until delivery to him, and in the mean time possession and control must be in some one, the clerk or servant is the only person who can be said to have such possession.
Consequently, where a bailment occurs in good faith on both sides, and the bailee subsequently converts the property, he cannot be convicted of larceny, for it is not a taking from the owner, and he cannot be convicted, of taking from his own possession.
Accordingly, if a man hire a horse to ride a journey, intending at the time to return him, and sell him afterwards
« Now, the facts in this case being settled, the first question arising for determination is, does the defendant come within the class of persons described in the statute by whom the crime of embezzlement can be committed?—in other words, was he a clerk or servant of the prosecutor ? I do not think he was either; he was certainly not the clerk of the prosecutor, and I cannot regard him as his servant in any sense of the term ;—of course the term e‘ servant” does not mean nor is the language limited in its application to the mere menial servant of the prosecutor, but it does mean and intend that relation between the parties which gives the employer the right to order, command, direct and control, and imposes on the person employed the duty of obedience and subjection in the performance of the particular service, at all times and in every particular, and with regard to the property of the master delivered by him to the servant in the course of such employment, gives to such servant the temporary custody thereof merely, the legal possession remaining in the owner.
The bailor could not demand, nor would he be entitled to reclaim, the said property before the completion of the contract; he could not dictate to the bailee as to whether the bailee himself should do the work or whether it should be done by others under the bailee’s direction ; he had no right to say at what place or places it should be done, or prescribe the means of doing it; he could only hold the, bailee responsible for a performance of the contract, without having any power over the agency by which such performance was effected, and when the contract was completed he could not then compel a delivery of the property without paying the contract price ; on the other hand, the bailee had a right to perform the work where he pleased, to do it himself, or employ others to do it, as he thought proper; his duty to the bailor was to fulfill the contract; the way, manner, and means, of such fulfillment resting entirely with himself. He had a lien also upon the property for the contract price and the right to hold the property as against the bailor for a sufficient time to perform the contract, and thereafter until paid he had not only the custody but the possession of the property, and possession coupled with an interest as against the bailor, the right of the prosecutor as owner to reclaim or interfere with the property being suspended during the performance of the contract.
The distinctive characteristics of the relations of master and servant and bailor and bailee, are so clearly marked and defined that no doubt can be entertained of the real nature of the relationship existing between the prosecutor and the prisoner. In this case it was that of employer and employee, under a contract between the parties whereby mutual and independent rights were created and conferred, and the prisoner was in nonsense of the term either the clerk or the servant of the prosecutor.
As the conclusion I have come to on this point substantially disposes of the conviction, it might not be necessary to regard the other matters which effect it. And yet it may not be proper to pass over any other defect which would render the conviction invalid, independent of the correctness of my views on the first point. And that there are others fatally defective there can be no doubt. In the first place, the indictment charges the embezzlement of stock ; the proof is that the stock was made into shoes by the direction of .the owner. The act of thus converting the stock into manufactured articles did not constitute an illegal
I can find no case under our statutes at all analogous to this. The idea is entirely new to me that a tradesman to whom raw materials are given to be converted into manufactured articles, who contracts and receives them in good faith upon a contract such as existed in this- case, would be guilty of embezzlement by a subsequent wrongful conversion. Perhaps the act should be made a crime,—morally there may be no difference between it and the acts which constitute embezzlement; but it is certainly not a crime at common law, and, therefore, until our statutes make it one, the courts cannot so regard it. It may be said this view of the law imposes hardship upon employers, but I do not see that such is the fact. It is simply necessary that they should use discrimination in the selection of workmen, and know who they are dealing with; in this way they can protect themselves, or in many others; they may require security, or make such special contracts as by retaining in themselves the legal possession and constituting the person employed but a mere servant, as will bring such person within the statute of embezzlement.
The English cases afford very little light on the subject, as the English statutes relating to it are broader and better than ours; in fact, in England, except so far as the mere proof is concerned, the distinction between embezzlement and larceny has ceased to exist; a conviction can now be
Entertaining these views, it becomes the duty of the court to set aside the verdict herein; and as there is considerable doubt with regard to the power of the court to set aside a verdict without ordering a new trial, the order will be in that form; but as a new trial in this case would be but a mere matter of formality, and a conviction could not under any circumstance be had, the prosecuting officer, if he desires it, can have an order of nolle proseguí ; but in the meantime, whether such order is entered or indictment retried, the prisoner is discharged without bail.