53 N.H. 610 | N.H. | 1873
The 257th chapter of the General Statutes relates to “ Frauds and Embezzlements,” and is so entitled. Its 7th section provides for the punishment of “ any public officer, being a receiver of public money,” who shall fraudulently convert the same to his own use. Its 8th section provides for the punishment of any officer, agent, or servant of any corporation, public or private, or the clerk, agent, or servant of any person,” who shall be guilty of a similar offence.
The indictment before us is founded upon one of these sections.
In the Revised Statutes, from which both sections were taken, the former is included in a chapter entitled ££ Offences against the State.” It is chapter 213, section 4, and its terms are substantially the sanie as those of sec. 7, ch. 257, Gen. Stats. The other sections of the chapter in the Revised Statutes relate to treason and misprision of treason solely. Section 4 would seem, from this connection, to have had special reference to state officers, — that is, officers whose duties concern the state at large or the general public (see Dillon Mun. Corp., sec. 33), and not to officers of municipal corporations.
Under the Revised Statutes, then, and until the enactment of the General Statutes, it would seem that a selectman could not be punished for embezzlement of town funds, unless by virtue of the provisions relating to a “ receiver of public money,” in the chapter of “ offences against the state ” already referred to, where the crimes of treason and embezzlement of public money are alone considered. But, by the terms of the General Statutes, ch. 257, sec. 8, the penalties prescribed for the embezzlement of bank funds, by officers of banks, were extended to “ any officer, agent, or servant of any corporation, public or private; ” and it would seem that, under this section, a selectman or any other town officer, or the general or special agent of any town, might be punished for the embezzlement of its funds, and that an indictment founded upon that section might be applied to a case like the present.
Doubtless it was for the purpose of curing this defect in the law that the restricted provision of secs. 40 and 41 of ch. 140, Rev. Stats., -were “made general” by the commissioners in the revision of 1867.- See Report of the Commissioners.
This application of the statute to the agent or servant of any corporation, public or private, fixes the liability of every town officer who shall embezzle the public funds. It is true that, in common legal parlance, towns are not usually spoken of as corporations, without the prefixed adjective “ municipal.” They are frequently spoken of as quasi corporations, and, by sec. 1, of ch. 133, Gen. Stats., the provisions of Title XVII, comprehending those ten chapters which are supposed to include all general legislation concerning corporations, do not apply to public municipal corporations, such as towns, cities, and the like.
But the terms of the statute relating to embezzlements are not restricted nor defined by the application and definitions of the provisions of Title XVII; and, as used in sec. 8 of ch. 258, Gen. Stats., the term “ public corporation ” may properly be applied to a town.
Of this there can be no doubt. Every municipal corporation is necessarily a public corporation. “All corporations, intended as agencies in the administration of civil government, are public as distinguished from private corporations. Thus, an incorporated school district or county, as well as a city, is a public corporation ; but the school district or county, properly speaking, is not, while the city is, a municipal corporation. All municipal corporations are public bodies, created for civil or political purposes; but all civil,political, or public corporations are not, in the proper use of language, municipal corporations.” Dillon Mun. Corp., see. 10.
In this state, public corporations arc understood to include all those which are created for public purposes, and whose property is devoted to the object for which they are created. Such, it is said, are counties,
It may not be entirely certain upon which of the two sections, 7 and 8, the public prosecutor relied in framing the indictment. He seems to have incorporated the language of both in the description of the official position of the respondent. He is called a public officer, and also a receiver of public money, to wit, a selectman ; and he is charged with the embezzlement and fraudulent conversion of public money.
Omitting the superfluous and unnecessary words “ and receiver of public money,” the respondent is described as “ a public officer, to wit, a selectman ; ” and such an officer is clearly included within the provisions of section 8 ; and, under that section, with proper averments in the indictment,' the respondent would probably be chargeable.
But it seems more probable that the prosecuting officer intended, by the framing of his bill, to charge the respondent under section 7, since he has used, in his description of the offender, the terms a “public officer” and a “ receiver of public money, — terms that are not employed in section 8, which applies in terms to “ any officer, agent, or servant of any corporation, public or private.” And we can have little doubt that the later compilers of the statutes, and the legislature of 1867, intended to enlarge the provisions of the Revised Statutes, ch. 213, sec. 4, by extending them to municipal corporate agents ; not confining them to state officers. This is indicated by the collocation of sec. 7, ch. 257, Gen. Stats., which (while its phraseology is retained without modification) is extracted from the chapter entitled “ Officers against the State” in the Revised Statutes, and where, as we have seen, it is associated with no other subjects than treason and misprision, and incorporated into the chapter entitled “ Frauds and Embezzlements,” where it becomes associated with kindred subjects, while the remainder of the chapter from which, as section 4, it is taken, is reenacted in the General Statutes under the title of “ Treason and Misprision.” Gen. Stats., ch. 265.
If, then, section 7 of ch. 257, Gen. Stats., may be applied, as we think it well may, to the servant or agent of a municipal corporation, the offender and the offence are described in this indictment fully and plainly, substantially and formally. It would be ridiculous to require the state to prove the precise source from which the precise money taken and converted was derived. The money in the officer’s hands may have come from various sources, and have been so mingled and confused as that the portion thereof embezzled and converted could by no possibility be designated, such fund having no ear-mark.
By the terms of the indictment, the respondent is described as being a public officer and receiver of public money, to wit, a selectman, etc., and is charged with fraudulently converting to his own use a specified sum, being the property and money of the town, which, as selectman, he had received.
.The word “ embezzle” is used in the indictment; but this may be rejected as surplusage, since it means no more than the offence, which is fully described by the use of other terms. See Bouv. Law Die., Embezzlement.
Selectmen are not ex officio receivers of the public money of the town, but they are invested with the functions of a treasurer upon the failure of the town to elect such an officer. Gen. Stats., ch. 37, sec. 4. So, too, by special vote of a town, a selectman may be constituted the agent to the town to receive, as well as to hold and appropriate, the funds of the town — Barnstead v. Walker, Belknap, December term, 1872 ; and in such a case he would come under the statutory designation of “ a public officer, being a receiver of public money.”
Moreover, in certain cases (in one case at least) selectmen are specially constituted receivers of the town’s money, as in Gen. Stats., ch. 53, sec. 8, where the collector is required to collect the taxes and pay the same “ to the state and county treasurer, and to the selectmen or town treasurer.” Demurrer overruled.