86 Ga. 717 | Ga. | 1891
To sustain this indictment it must conform to the requirements of either section 4422 or 4424 of the code. The former of these sections relates to factors, commission merchants, warehouse-keepers, wharfingers, wagoners, stage-drivers, common carriers, or any other bailees. We take it that this section means the same as if it had read any other like bailees ; that is, it was intended to apply to all bailees, who from the very nature of their business invite the confidence of the public, and the entrusting to them of personal property to be dealt with in the course of such business. In each in
It will now be inquired if the indictment 'is good under §4424. That section is certainly broad enough to include all persons, if the charge is properly set forth, because it enacts that “if any person, who has been entrusted,” etc., but it also unmistakably requires that' the purpose of the trust shall be declared, because as to each of the numerous classes or kinds of property mentioned in the section it specifies a particular object for which the same shall be entrusted, and makes the violation of that particular trust a crime. This question has been definitely settled by this court in the case of Carter v. The State, 53 Ga. 326. Referring to this very section, Judge Trippe, on page 328, says: “It is
Judgment reversed.