207 Mo. 1 | Mo. | 1907
— On June 12, 1906, the assistant circuit attorney of St. Louis filed an information, duly
The State’s evidence tended to prove that the St. Louis Transfer Company was a corporation with its principal office of business in the city of St. Louis, and engaged in the transfer business in St. Louis and East St. Louis. On May 1, 1906, a man who went by the name of George Franklin, but whose real name was Louis Formaneck, was one of the drivers of the St. Louis 'Transfer Company, driving wagon number 33, and on the said day drove one of their wagons to the freight depot of the Southern Railroad Company at East St. Louis and received from the agent of said railroad eighty-nine cases of Bull Durham tobacco and fifteen butts of seven pounds each of Piper-Heidsieck chewing tobacco, for which he gave a receipt, signed George Franklin. The freight agent instructed Franklin, alias Formaneck, to take said tobacco to the Missouri Pacific freight depot, in St. Louis. This tobacco was then of the reasonable market value of $1,500. Franklin, alias Formaneck, reported at the office and stable of the St. Louis Transfer Company, which was located at Third and Poplar streets, at five o’clock that evening,
The defendant testified that George Franklin, alias Louis Formaneck, came to his saloon on the 1st or 2nd of May and represented to him that he had some Bull Durham smoking tobacco for sale, and would like to sell the defendant a wagon-load of it. The defendant declined, saying that he did not sell five pounds of Bull Durham in a month, when Franklin asked him if he knew anybody who- would buy it. The defendant suggested Fuelseher, and Franklin asked defendant to telephone Fuelseher and see if he would buy it. Defendant asked Franklin where he got so much tobacco, and Franklin said he bought it in salvage, that the tobacco was supposed to be slightly wet, as it had come out of a freight wreck. At the time defendant recommended Fuelseher he remarked to Franklin that the
In a little while, Fuelscher came to defendant’s saloon and had a talk with Franklin and then applied to defendánt for a loan of $250 to bind the sale. The defendant declined to loan any money, but Fuelscher promised to give him one hundred dollars for making the loan, so the defendant concluded to do so. The defendant then went up stairs and talked to his wife, who had the money and who objected at first to making the loan. She finally concluded to do so and gave the defendant $250 in cash, which he straightway handed to Fuelscher. The defendant denied all knowledge of the tobacco being stolen, but did not deny his signature to the receipts offered in evidence, neither did he deny the contradictory and false statements made by him at the time of and after his arrest. The defendant offered one Collinson, who was his bartender at the time, and who testified that he saw the defendant get the money from the defendant’s wife and loan the same to Fuelscher. Another gentleman testified in behalf of defendant that he was in defendant’s saloon at the same time and saw the defendant get some money from his wife and loan to Fuelscher; but neither knew the terms upon which the same was loaned. The defendant’s wife, for some reason, did not testify.
Other facts may be noted in the further consideration of the cause, in connection with the instructions of the court, and the assignments of error.
I. The pivotal question in this case is, conceding that the evidence in the case was sufficient to establish the guilt of the defendant of either of the offenses charged in the information, of which was he guilty, grand larceny or embezzlement? The distinction between larceny and embezzlement is one fully recognized in the criminal law of this State as well as in England. While the two offenses have much in com
Section 1912, Revised Statutes 1899, defines the offense in these words: “If any agent, clerk, apprentice, servant or collector of any private person, or of any co-partnership, except persons so employed under the age of sixteen years, or if any officer, agent, clerk, servant or collector of any incorporated company, or any person employed in any such capacity, shall embezzle or convert to his own use, or shall take, make way with or secrete, with intent to embezzle or convert to his own use, without the assent of his master or employer, ■any money, goods, rights in action, or valuable security or effects whatsoever, belonging to any other person, which shall have come into his possession or under his care by virtue of such employment or office, he shall, upon conviction, be punished in the manner prescribed by law for stealing property of the kind or the value of the articles so embezzled, taken or secreted.” And section 1916, Revised Statutes 1899', provides: “Every person who shall buy, or in any way receive, any goods, money, right in action, personal property or any valuable security or effects whatsoever, that shall have been embezzled, converted, taken or secreted contrary to the provisions of the last four sections, or that shall have been stolen from another, knowing the same to have been so embezzled, taken or secreted, or stolen, shall, upon conviction, be punished in the same manner and to the same extent as for the stealing the money,