Opinion by
Asserting that the court committed an error in law in directing a jury verdict of acquittal in favor of the defendant in error, the district attorney for the Fourth Judicial District, County of El Paso, prosecutes this writ of error pursuant to C.R.S. 1963, 39-7-26(2).
The defendant in error was the executive director of the Memorial Hospital operated by the City of Colorado Springs. He was charged in an information in the district court of El Paso County with converting public funds (property of the hospital) to his private use in ordering, purchasing and using building materials in his own mountain lodge.
The information contained seventeen separate counts. The record amply supports the following finding by the trial court:
“1. The evidence conclusively shows that there was a policy on the part of Memorial Hospital, owned by the City of Colorado Springs,- to permit the purchase of various articles of personal property, including but not intending to exclude, property not herein mentioned, drugs, electrical appliances, bed clothing, building materials, and other properties, for the purpose of permitting the employees of the hospital and physicians and others connected with the Hospital, to secure a discount on their purchases. This policy
An essential element of the crime of “embezzlement” or “criminal conversion” charged herein is that the property must be owned by another and the conversion thereof must be without the consent and against the will of the party to whom the property belongs, coupled with the fraudulent intent to deprive the owner of the property. Gill v. People,
The people also assert as error the trial court ruling that the defendant in error was not an officer as defined in C.R.S. 1963, 40-19-3. In view of the disposition made by the court on the finding of a debtor-creditor relationship, it is immaterial whether the position of the defendant in error in the hospital management structure comes within the provisions of the statute. He could not, under the facts presented herein, be in violation of the statute which also has implicit within its language the requisite unlawful conversion and criminal intent which were lacking in this case.
The judgment is affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Moore, Mr. Justice Sutton and Mr. Justice Hodges concur.
