165 Misc. 634 | New York Court of General Session of the Peace | 1938
A motion to inspect the grand jury minutes is presented by the defendant, and she prays that upon such inspection the indictment be dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence.
The indictment charges grand larceny of $650 in two counts, first, common-law larceny; and, second, larceny by a bailee or trustee, in violation of section 1290 of the Penal Law.
The motion papers, as well as the testimony taken by the magistrate (See People v. Klinger, 164 Misc. 530) and that before the grand jury show that the prosecution charges the defendant with the felonious conversion or embezzlement, upon the expiration of a lease, of the moneys deposited as security for the performance of the conditions of such lease, made by the Klinger & Company, Inc., of which the defendant is the treasurer, to the complainant, who claims he has become entitled to the return of his deposit at the end of the term for which it was given, he having fully complied with all the conditions of said lease.
There is no count in the indictment charging a violation of section 1302-a of the Penal Law (Laws of 1933, chap. 571), which makes it a misdemeanor for a landlord to fail to turn over deposits made by a tenant.
If any crime was here committed it is larceny by the- defendant as a trustee or bailee. She contends, however, that by express covenant in the lease the security so deposited shall not be regarded as a trust fund, and that the relationship between the landlord and tenant shall be that of debtor and creditor only. The Real Property Law (§ 233) provides that a deposit is a trust fund. The enactment of this statute in 1935 was undoubtedly to meet the decisions in People v. N. W. 5th Avenue & 27th Street Corp. (145 Misc. 778; affd., 239 App. Div. 773) and People v. Horowitz (138
Embezzlement or misappropriation of trust funds by a trustee or bailee is larceny under section 1290 of the Penal Law. (People v. Shears, 158 App. Div. 577.) The term “ trustee,” heretofore given a narrow meaning (See People v. Epstein, 245 N. Y. 234), has been enlarged by the statute supra.
The defendant concedes the possession of the money and her refusal to return it to the lessee. On behalf of her company she claims the right to apply it against an alleged claim for damages resulting from a breached collateral and independent agreement between the parties, which is disputed by the complainant. The defendant testified on this subject before the grand jury, and her credibility was passed upon by the jurors, who ordered the indictment filed. Nevertheless, the issues involved raise questions of fact, all of which must necessarily be considered in determining the question of defendant’s intent. There is no doubt that she makes open and avowed claim to the money in question; but whether she does so in good faith is a matter for a trial court; and in the same manner it must be determined in the light of all the evidence, whether she has aided and abetted in acting for the corporation in the withholding, allegedly unlawfully, such moneys. Whether a fraud or unlawful withholding was intended must be decided from all the surrounding circumstances, including the provisions of the written lease, and whether the claimed setoff is an honest one, made under a firm belief of rightful title, even though by a mistaken notion of the law, presents a question of fact. The use of the peculiar phraseology in the lease regarding the contractual relationship of the parties denotes the defendant’s appreciation of the responsibility of landlords as to the return of deposits (See Matter of Atlas, 217 App. Div. 38); and it may be argued that it indicates that the sima intrusted to the defendant’s company was not to be used as security for any other purpose than performance of the lease and, not as a setoff to secure the payment of liquidated or unliquidated damages arising outside the lease by virtue of the conduct of the complainant in other matters. What a person’s intent is in a case, where the diversion of trust funds by a trustee is concerned is always. a question or matter of fact; and a criminal intent may be estab-,
The grand jury proceedings should be secret, and only where1 facts clearly warrant it ought there to be an inspection granted a defendant. The court must not speculate with reference to claims and contentions in moving papers upon applications for such relief; but it is incumbent upon the defendant, who has the burden in this regard, to make out affirmatively a sufficiently strong case to warrant an attack against the presumed legality of the indictment. The test is not whether the granting of such a motion would result in no possible harm or prejudice to the People, as is here urged by the moving party. In recent years a practice, that should be discouraged, seems to have grown up on motions of this kind. Where papers presented for orders of inspection of grand jury minutes are insufficient, the district attorney has at times seen fit to submit the minutes to the court for examination, probably upon the assumption that if the testimony adduced before the grand jury made out a prima facie case, then the motion would be denied; otherwise the application would be granted. This practice may be useful and should be adopted only when the case is doubtful and there is no objection to the reading of the minutes by the court as an aid to its conscience in passing upon the application. The grand jury proceedings have been examined here and found to warrant the finding of the indictment.
Motion denied accordingly.