74 Md. 517 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee was indicted by the grand jury of Howard County for embezzlement. The indictment alleged, in substance, that in July, 1889, Denton was clerk to the County Commissioners of Howard County, and that he received and took into his possession for and on account of his employers, the said County Commissioners, a certain sum of money, the property of the County Commissioners, and that he thereafter fraudulently and feloniously embezzled, secreted, and made away with the same. This count of the indictment was framed under and founded on see. 75, Art. 27 of the Code. The second count charges'the larceny of one hundred and nine dollars and seventy-two cents, “current money, a more particular description of which said money the jurors aforesaid have not and cannot give.” Each count was demurred to, and the Circuit Court having sustained the demurrer, the State has brought the record into this Court by petition as upon writ of error.
The 75tA sec. of Art. 27 of the Code provides that “whosoever, being a cashier, servant, agent, or clerk to any person, or to any body corporate, or being employed for the purpose or in the capacity of a cashier, servant, agent, or clerk by any person or body corporate, shall fraudulently embezzle any money, **,*** which, or any part whereof, shall be delivered to or received, or taken
We think it perfectly clear that sec. 80, of Art. 27 of the Code has no application to the case at bar, and unless sec. 75 is broad enough to cover it, there is no provision in the criminal law of Maryland to reach the appellee. As a consequence, he, and a very large class of other persons holding similar positions of a public or quasi
The reasons just given for excluding the appellee from the operation of the 80th sec. bring him clearly within the scope of the 15í7¿ sec. He is a clerk to a body corporate and as such clerk, according to the concessions of the demurrer, he fraudulently embezzled money received by him for and on account of his employer. The fact that he is a clerk to a public corporation does not put him outside of the *75¿7z sec. because that section is broad enough to embrace public as well as private corporations; nor does the circumstance that his salary is paid out of the public revenue of the county affect in the slightest degree his liability under this statute, because the mode of payment does not determine the character of the office held — that is, does not make it an independent office, if it he not otherwise so. The Act of 1820, ch. 162, as amended by the Acts of 1880, ch. 458, and 1886, ch. 310, forms sec. 15, of Art 21 of the Code. As originally passed it was nearly an exact transcript of 39 Geo. III, ch. 85, adopted in 1799. In 1818, (two years prior to the passage of the Act of 1820, ch. 162,) the case of Rex vs. Squire, Russ. & Ry., 349, arose under 39 Geo. III, ch. 85. In that case (which is also reported in 2 Stark. N. P. C., 349,) the prisoner was tried before Mr. Justice Bayley on an indictment for embezzling fourteen one
The case of Reg. vs. Lovell, 2 Moody & Rob., 236, was-strongly pressed upon us by the appellee’s counsel, but it decides nothing in conflict with the views we have expressed. The prisoner was indicted for larceny under 7 and 8 Geo. IV, ch. 29, sec. 46, and for embezzlement under 2 W. IV, ch. 4. Sec. 46 of 7 and 8 Geo. IV, ch. 29, provided for the punishment of depredations committed by clerks and servants in cases not punishable capitally, and enacted “that if any clerk or servant shall steal any chattel, money * * * * * belonging to or in the possession or power of his master, every such offender,”' &c. should be punished in the manner there prescribed. The prisoner was clerk to the collector of customs at the Port of Falmouth, and was appointed by the commissioners of customs under 3 and 4 W. IV, ch. 51, and it was his duty to receive and place in the collector’s box each day moneys received in payment of customs. He embezzled some of the moneys. Coleridge, J., had great doubt “whether or no 7 and 8 Geo. IV, ch. 29, sec. 46, was meant to include public servants of the Crown, such as the prisoner.” He further said: “It would seem intended to protect the private dealings of the subjects only against their clerks and servants;” and he added: “But it is unnecessary to determine that point, as I have no doubt that this is a case upon the facts within the latter Act,” the Act of 2 W. IV, ch. 4. Our Act of 1820, ch. 162 was not taken from 7 and 8 Geo, IV, ch. 29, which was passed in 1827, but from 39 Geo. Ill, ch. 85, which is very much broader and more comprehensive than 7 and 8 Geo. IV, ch. 29. Sec. 46 of the latter Act related, not to embezzlement as sec. 47 did, but to larceny by clerks and servants. But beyond this, Coleridge, J., expressly refrained from determining whether the prisoner was within 7 and 8 Geo. IV, ch. 29, sec. 46,
The case of State vs. Connelly, 104 N. C., 794, was also much relied on by the appellee. In that case the clerk of a Superior Court of North Carolina was indicted for embezzlement under a statute which declared that, “if any officer, agent, clerk, employe, or servant of any corporation, person or co-partnership” shall embezzle he shall he guilty of felony. And it was held that as the clerk of the Superior Court was not an officer of a corporation, but a public officer, he was not within the terms of the statute. This is obviously a different case from the one at bar.
From the views we have expressed it follows that in our opinion the ruling of the Circuit Court in sustain-, ing the demurrer to the first count of the indictment was erroneous.
The second count was properly quashed. The description of the money alleged to have been stolen was entirely too indefinite and vaguie. 2 Bish. Cr. Proc., sec. 703; Steuart vs. State, 62 Md., 413; Kearney vs. State, 48 Md., 23.
The judgment in each of these three cases must be reversed, because of the error committed in sustaining the demurrer to the first count in each indictment, and the cases will be remanded for new trials.
Judgments reversed, and . new trials atvarded.