240 P. 36 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
The defendant was held under two informations, each charging him with the crime of embezzlement. *166 The cases were consolidated and tried together, resulting in convictions on both charges. The defendant moved for a new trial and his motion was granted as to both charges. This appeal is from the order granting a new trial. No brief has been filed in behalf of respondent and the cause was ordered submitted for decision upon the appellant's opening brief.
[1] The first information alleges that the defendant was president of the Modern Laundry Company, a corporation; that there came into his possession as such officer the sum of $550 "of the personal property of said Modern Laundry"; and that on the ___ day of September, 1922, he "did wilfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and fraudulently appropriate said money and personal property to his own use, not in due and lawful execution of his trust." The second information, in similar language, charges the embezzlement of $325 on or about the ____ day of November, 1922.
The Modern Laundry Company was incorporated March 11, 1922. The defendant was elected president thereof March 30, 1922. He was the active manager of the corporation. His authority is not shown further than may be inferred from his position in the company and his activities in its affairs. The secretary-treasurer of the company testified that the minutes do not show that the defendant was authorized "to cash checks for or on behalf of the company" or to deposit "the funds of the company in his own private account." The record is silent as to what the by-laws provide in this respect.
March 30, 1922, the state commissioner of corporations issued his permit, authorizing the company "to sell two hundred and fifty shares of its capital stock to its incorporators for cash and fourteen thousand seven hundred and fifty shares to the public for cash, subject to a selling cost not to exceed twenty per cent of the amount paid in cash account of each subscription, upon the condition that the company, on or before the first day of October, 1922, impound in a depositary to be first selected by the company and approved by the commissioner of corporations, the net sum of fifty thousand dollars, otherwise eighty per cent of each payment was to be returned to each subscriber upon his demand therefor." The company did not select a depositary until March, 1923. "Between six and eight thousand dollars" *167 was then deposited with the depositary so selected. This money was at a later time paid to subscribers under the order of the commissioner of corporations, they receiving, in the order of their applications therefor, eighty per cent of the respective amounts paid by them for stock, until the fund was exhausted. The fund was insufficient to reimburse all subscribers. The sums alleged to have been embezzled by defendant were received by him from two subscribers in payment for stock, and no part thereof was ever repaid to them. The evidence does not show how many shares of stock were sold or the amount of money received therefor. It appears that the defendant received all sums paid in for capital stock and that he deposited the same to his personal credit in his private bank account. The account-books of the company were kept by or under the direction of the defendant. A witness for the prosecution, who had audited the accounts of the corporation, testified that the defendant delivered to him, for the purposes of the audit, "stock certificate books and card records of the stockholders' accounts, showing amounts of the capital stock subscribed and the payments thereof, various canceled checks signed by Mitchell, receipted invoices, . . . one book that was supposed to be the cash book, . . . a record of the receipts from stock subscriptions; it was in a very crude form."
The defendant expended large sums of the money so received in remodeling and repairing a building which, as appears inferentially, was purchased by the company for use as a laundry. Neither the purchase price of the property nor the amount, if any, paid thereon appears from the evidence. Neither does it appear whether the defendant appropriated to his own use any of the funds of the company. It was admitted at the trial that two subscribers for capital stock paid the defendant for the company the sums alleged to have been embezzled and that he deposited the same to the credit of his personal account. Whether these sums were included in the amount finally turned over to the depositary does not appear. The case of the prosecution rests entirely upon the receipt by defendant of these two sums of money in his trust capacity as president of the company and his deposit thereof in his personal bank account.
In People v. Royce,
[2] Whether the deposit of the sums alleged to have been embezzled by the defendant constituted the crime charged depends upon the intent with which such deposits were made. If so deposited with the intent to devote the same to his own use the defendant thereby committed the crime of embezzlement, regardless of whether he thereafter actually devoted the money to such use. In proof of the intent with which the deposits were made, the prosecution was entitled to show all receipts by defendant of money for the company and the disposition and use made thereof by him. (People v. Ward,
"If you are convinced by the evidence in this case to a moral certainty and beyond all reasonable doubt that Mrs. Ross Burden gave her check for $325.00 for the purchase of stock of the Modern Laundry Company, and that Andrew *169 Glaser gave his check for $550.00 also for the purchase of stock in the Modern Laundry Company, and if you further are convinced by the evidence to a moral certainty and beyond all reasonable doubt that the permit granted by the Corporation Commissioner for the sale of the stock of said Modern Laundry Company required that not exceeding 20% of the money received for such sales could be expended for any purpose until such time as a sum equal to $50,000 was deposited with a depositary selected by the Corporation and approved by the Commissioner of Corporations; and if you further believe from the evidence to a moral certainty and beyond all reasonable doubt that the defendant, H.N. Mitchell, cashed these checks and deposited the proceeds to his own personal account in the California National Bank. That money was not deposited with a depositary selected by the corporation and approved by the Commissioner of Corporations. That H.N. Mitchell afterward paid out such money for purposes not allowed or authorized in a sum exceeding 20% of the total amount received for the sale of the stock of the corporation, so that the money was lost to the corporation, then I charge you that such acts constituted embezzlement upon his part, and you should find him guilty as charged in each case."
The instruction is clearly erroneous. [5] An appropriation must be fraudulent to constitute the crime of embezzlement. This essential element of the crime is entirely omitted from the instruction. The defendant was charged with the fraudulent appropriation of two specified sums of money to his own use, but the instruction states, in effect, that he may be convicted upon proof that he used, for any purpose, "a sum exceeding 20% of the total amount received for the sale of the stock of the corporation." It is elementary that a defendant cannot be convicted of a crime with which he is not charged.
[6] During the progress of the trial, in the presence of the jury, the trial judge and the district attorney frequently expressed sharply conflicting opinions relative to the law applicable to the case. Counsel for defendant objected to the admission of certain evidence offered in rebuttal by the district attorney and the trial judge stated that the evidence was not competent in a criminal case. After a colloquy between the judge and the district attorney, the *170
latter said: "I know what competent testimony is. I have tried as many cases as your honor has tried, and, if I may add, as many cases as your honor ever will try. I know what competent testimony is and rebuttal testimony." Four times during the reading of the instructions to the jury the district attorney interrupted the court by announcing his exceptions to as many instructions which had been read, stating the grounds of his respective exceptions as follows: (a) "We contend that isn't the law. . . . I think it is an encroachment on the province of the jury with reference to the facts"; (b) "I would like to except to that instruction . . . on the ground it is not a true statement of the law"; (c) "We enter an exception to the instruction as not properly stating the law. . . . The other instruction (one requested by the district attorney and refused) has the approval of the supreme court"; (d) "We except to that instruction . . . as not being a correct construction of the law, and also an encroachment on the rights of the jury as to the facts." When the court stated, in response to one of the exceptions taken, that "the law excepts to any instruction given by the court," the district attorney replied: "I want the jury to know what instructions I except to." However strongly a district attorney may believe that the court is in error as to the law, he should refrain from the use of any language which might incline jurors to accept his statement of the law rather than that of the court.[7] Section
The order is affirmed.
Thompson, J., pro tem., and Plummer, J., concurred. *171