16 Nev. 120 | Nev. | 1881
By the Court,
Appellant was county treasurer of Storey county from the sixth day of January, A. D. 1879, up to and including the thirtieth day of October, 1880. He was subsequently indicted, tried, and convicted, for the crime of embezzlement, for unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously converting to his own use twenty-one thousand nine hundred and forty dollars and ninety-one.cents of the public money, intrusted to his safe keeping, transfer, and disbursement, as county treasurer, alleged to have been committed on the thirtieth day of October, 1880, and before the finding of the indictment. One count charges the public money thus converted to be the property of Storey county. The other charges the same money to be the property of the state of Nevada and the county of Storey. The money is described as “sundry gold and silver coins, lawful money of the United States, and of the aggregate value of twénty-one thousand nine hundred and forty dollars and ninety-one cents, a more particular description of which gold and silver coins and money the grand jury can not give, as they have no means of knowledge.”
A demurrer was interposed to the indictment, upon the ground that it “fails to describe any of the moneys alleged to be embezzled, or to state the denominations or character of any of said moneys.”
1. It is claimed that the court erred in overruling this demurrer. It is also ai’gued that evidence of a general deficiency is not sufficient to establish the crime of embezzlement; that the evidence must show the conversion of some
■ We are of opinion that the indictment substantially conforms to the provisions of sections 234 and 285 of the criminal practice act (1 Comp. L. 1858, 1859), and that it is in all respects sufficient. It is unnecessary in an indictment against a county treasurer for embezzlement to specify with certainty the particular kind of funds, whether gold or silver coins or legal tender notes, or to give the denomination of each coin or note, or to specify from whom or what par-' ticular time the money was received. As against a public officer, it is sufficient to allege and prove the felonious conversion to his own use of any money that came into his possession, or was under his control by virtue of his office. (State v. Walton, 62 Me. 109.)
Iii cases of larceny, or receiving stolen goods, it is usually within the power of the owner to describe the kind and character of money or other property stolen, and in the case of embezzlement by clerks, agents, and servants of private parties there is but little difficulty in giving a 'particular description of the money embezzled. The acts of the clerk, agent, or servant are generally performed under the direct supervision or control of the principal, who, therefore, has, or may at any time have, full and accurate knowledge of tbe character of the particular sums, and from whom received, and possesses facilities for tracing out the facts while transpiring or recent. But these considerations do not apply to a'county treasurer. He is the only person who knows the kinds and character of money in his custody and under his control. The public at large can exercise no constant supervision over his acts, nor. can it, like a private individual, assume the direct custody of the funds at any moment. The proper authorities may, it is true, require him to account, may count and examine the funds in his possession; but all these funds may be changed long before 'the act of embezzlement is done or the intent is formed,- and ’if tbe law required the kinds and character of money em'bezzled, and the particular date of embezzlement of any
In the case from which we have quoted, the defendant, McKinney, was state treasurer. He was indicted for embezzlement of the public money under his control. The indictment did not describe the particular kind or character of money or notes alleged to have been unlawfully converted, nor did it state that the character and denominations of said money were to the grand jurors unknown. It was held to be . sufficient. This decision was followed •and approved by the supreme court of Minnesota, in the case of an indictment against the treasurer of that state, for embezzlement (State v. Munch, 22 Minn. 67); and by the supreme court' of Kansas in the ease of a similar indictment against a county treasurer. (State v. Smith, 13 Kan. 274.)
In The State v. Flint, 62 Mo. 393, the defendant, who was a sheriff and tax collector, was indicted for embezzlement, and, in considering certain objections urged against the indictment, the court said: “We do not think there is any valid objection to the indictment on account of its failure to state from whom defendant received the money, or'to point out what particular, money he embezzled, or-whether
The objections urged to the indictment and to the rulings of the court in giving and refusing certain instructions, as to the sufficiency of the proof, of a general deficiency in the accounts of the defendant as county treasurer, can not, for the reasons stated, be sustained.
2. Did the court err in disallowing appellant’s challenge to the juror Coyne? This juror, upon his voir dire, testified as follows: “I believe and have an unqualified opinion that there was a deficiency in .the accounts of the defendant as treasurer of Storey county; but I have neither formed nor expressed' an unqualified opinion as to defendant’s guilt or innocence of the crime with which he stands charged. -x- -x- j ean give defendant a fair and impartial trial upon the evidence.” The defendent subsequently interposed a peremptory challenge to this juror, and the record shows that all of his peremptory challenges were exhausted.
The challenge was interposed under the provisions of the eighth subdivision of section 340 of the criminal practice act, which declares that “ a challenge for implied bias may be taken for all or any of the followipg causes, and for no other: * * * Eighth — Having formed or expressed an unqualified opinion or belief that the prisoner is guilty or not guilty of the offense charged.” (1 Comp. L. 1964.)
The object of the law is, as stated in State v. McClear, 11 Nev. 66, to secure to the defendant and the state a fair and impartial trial. The real condition of the juror’s mind must be determined from the whole of his testimony, and if it appears therefrom that he has no deliberate and fixed opinion in favor of, or against the defendant, he is not disqualified by virtue of this provision of the statute.
There is in almost every criminal case some fact which must be proved upon the trial, that is generally, if not universally, known, and is the subject of newspaper comment and of frequent conversations in the community, and if the
As a general rule, the opinion of the juror, in order to disqualify him, must be upon the merits; that is, whether “ the prisoner is guilty or not guilty of the offense charged,” and not upon some one particular fact or feature of the case. Thus, in cases of homicide, it has been held that a juror who has formed the opinion that the defendant did the killing is not incompetent if he has not formed an opinion as to whether the defendant wras guilty or innocent of crime in the act of killing. (State v. Thompson, 9 Iowa, 190; Lowenberg v. People, 27 N. Y. 342.)
In the case last cited the court said: “It is clear that the forming of an opinion that the prisoner had done an act necessary to be shown, among others, in order to convict him, was not the forming of an opinion that he was guilty of murder or any other crime.” So here, the fact that the juror had an opinion that there was a deficiency in the accounts of the defendant, which was a fact to be proved in the case, was not such an opinion as to the defendant’s guilt, as, of itself, to disqualify the juror. The fact of the deficiency was not necessarily so intimately blended with the main fact in issue as to prevent the juror from determining the question of defendant’s guilt or innocence from the evidence that might be adduced at the trial.
Wo think it is apparent from the answers given by the juror that his mind was in such a condition as to enable him “to weigh the evidence in impartial scales and a true verdict render according to the law and the evidence.” If so, he was a competent juror. (State v. McClear, 11 Nev. 68.) It is not to be expected, nor does the law require, that a juror will come into court without any opinion whatever. The defendant has only the right to demand that each juror will be free from prejudice and bias, and have no deliberate, fixed, or settled opinion as to his guilt.
In The State v. Lawrence, a juror had read the accounts of a homicide in the newspapers, and “believed the man
The court said: “It is scarcely possible, in a community where an act has been done which startles and attracts the public mind, to obtain a juror, who should be intrusted with so grave a matter as the determination of the question of the guilt or innocence of the accused, whose mind has received no impression with regard to the case. Either from public rumor or newspaper reports, almost every person competent to serve as a juror, will have learned something in regard to the circumstances attending the commission of the alleged offense. And, as some impression, more or less strong, is almost invariably made by such reports, the rule which would demand a juror with no opinion respecting the case, would, in cases attracting public attention, and in which intelligence is most needed, practically exclude every intelligent man from the jury.” (38 Iowa, 54.) Similar views are expressed in The State v. Bruce, 48 Iowa, 536, and in Stewart v. The People, 23 Mich. 72.
In The State v. Spaulding, Kansas (reported in American Law Register for February, 1881, p. 110), where the defendant, a city clerk, was indicted for embezzlement, a juror testified “ that he bad an opinion, founded upon rumor, that public money was missing; that he had no opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, and that be believed defendant was city clerk.” This juror, upon substantially the same reasons which we have already expressed, was'held to be competent.'
It was, perhaps,, unnecessary to refer to any other than our own decisions, for it is clear to our minds, from, the principles announced in the concluding portion of the opinion in State v. McClear, and the views expressed in State v. Davis, 14 Nev. 439, that the court did not err in disallowing this challenge.
3. Was the confession of the defendant to the witness Smith admissible ? Defendant was a candidate for re-election. There was a rumor on the streets that be was a
The law excluding confessions-is based in a spirit of charity for the weakness'of human nature; and rests.upon -the theory, that a man when charged with crime and threatened with the punishment of the law, or promised immunity therefrom, may be induced, while in an alarnied and excited condition of mind, to make statements that are not
But the essential elements that would entitle the defendant to this charity of the law are lacking in the facts of this case. At the time the statement was made, the defendant was not charged with any crime. No complaint had been, filed. He was not under arrest. No prosecution was threatened. There was no.promise or representation made by Smith which could reasonably have induced the defendant to state things that were not true. Moreover, Smith was not an officer. He had no authority. He did not stand in any such relation toward the defendant as to exercise any undue influence or control over the mind of the defendant as to make his confession inadmissible. It is true that Smith and Derby were jointly liable upon the official bond of the defendant in the sum of twenty thousand dollars; that they might have been able to pay the deficiency in defendant’s accounts before the money could have been officially counted by the county commissioners, and it may be, if the accounts had been made good, that no criminal prosecution would have been instituted (although that fact would not have relieved defendant from such prosecution.) But these facts, if they had any influence over the defendant, were only calculated to make him tell the truth. Holding the office he did, it must be presumed, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, that he was a man of ordinary mind and intelligence, and we can not conceive of any reasonable theory which, upon the defendant’s own’ statement of the conversation, could have induced him to tell'an untruth as to his guilt.
■ It is only in cases where the confession is ’obtained by mob violence, or by threats of harm, or promises of favor or worldly advantage held out by some person in authority, or standing in such iutimate relation from which the law will presume that his promises or threats will be likely to exercise such an influence over the mind of the accused as to induce him to state things that are not true, that will authorize the courts to exclude the confession or admission.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.