265 Mo. 190 | Mo. | 1915
Defendant, convicted in the circuit court of Clay county for a violation of the provisions of section 4556, Revised Statutes 1909, and having had assessed against him as punishment therefor imprisonment in the state penitentiary for the term of three years, has, after the usual motions, appealed.
“Now, .on this 9th day of September, 1912, comes William E. Fowler, administrator of the estate of Delaven B. Finn, deceased, by his attorney, and also comes Myrtle M. Kennedy, sole heir and distributee of the estate of said Delavan E. Finn, deceased, in proper person and by her attorney; and said administrator now here files his final settlement in said estate, on examination whereof the court finds that there remains in the hands of said administrator for distribution in said estate the sum of $1678.05.
“And the court- further finds that said administrator duly published notice of his intention to make final settlement in said estate at this term of court, and filed the proof of said publication herein.
“And the court further finds that said final settlement has been by order of this court regularly continued until this date.
“And the court further finds said Myrtle M. Kennedy to be the sole heir and distributee of the estate of said Delavan E. Firm, deceased.
“It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged by the court that said final settlement be and the same is hereby approved and ordered to be recorded, and that the balance found due for distribution herein, to-■wit, the said sum of $1678.05, be by said William E. Fowler, administrator, paid to said Myrtle M. Kennedy, sole heir and distributee, as aforesaid. And it is further ordered by the court that said administrator report the payment of said amount, with voucher therefor, to this court as speedily as is possible. ’ ’
The above order was offered upon the trial. There was likewise offered the testimony of Judge Lewis G. Hopkins, judge of the probate court of said county, who among other things, identified the records which were duly offered and the effect of which we have stated above. Pertinent to the facts in the case Judge Hopkins was asked and answered the following questions, to-wit:
“Q. I’ll ask you to state whether or not any report of distribution was ever filed in the estate of Delavan E. Finn by William E. Fowler, the administrator, in pursuance to the order of your court that he distribute the balance found to be due to the beneficiary of that estate? A. No.
‘ ‘ Q. And was any receipt from the beneficiary to the administrator, William E. Fowler, ever filed or produced in your court? A. No. sir.”
This was all of the pertient evidence offered in the case outside of formal matters showing the appointment of defendant as administrator; his qualifying as such; his filing certain term settlements; his filing the said final settlement, from which the facts and such balance as stated appeared, and the further fact that these matters and things transpired in Clay county. After showing these formal matters and after offering
If other facts shall become necessary for an understanding of the things discussed in the subjoined opinion, they will be found set out therein.
OPINION.
We are met at the outset by the strenuous insistence of defendant that the evidence adduced by the State is not sufficient to make out a case to go to the jury. Defendant offered no evidence; contenting him with that the State presented.
Approaching this contention in a moderately logical way we note that the applicable part of section 4556, Revised Statutes 1909, under which defendant was prosecuted and convicted, thus provides: “If any . . . administrator . . . shall convert to his own use,, in any manner whatever, or shall use by way of investment in any kind of property . . •. or shall make way. with, or secrete . . . any moneys that may have come to him ... by virtue of his . . . office . or by virtue of any trust reposed in him, . . . every such . . . administrator . . . shall upon conviction, be punished in the manner prescribed for stealing property of the kind or the value of the article so embezzled, converted, taken or secreted. ’ ’
It will be noted that so far as applicable to the concrete facts before us in the instant case defendant in order to be held guilty must by the--proof offered by
We have seen from the statement that the only effort made by the State to prove either a conversion, an investment, a making away with, or a secreting of this Sum of $1678.05', or of any part thereof, was by a showing that the probate court had ordered the defendant •to pay over said above sum to the distributee, said Myrale M. Kennedy, and to “report the payment of said amount with voucher therefor to this court as; speedily as possible” (italics ours); and further that defendant had not up to the date of the trial below reported such payment to the probate court of Clay county, or filed any voucher with said court — speedily, or otherwise. This was all. .There was no showing that defendant had not paid the money to said Myrtle M. Kennedy. For aught that appears he may have done so. The record is clear that defendant did not file any receipt or voucher with the probate court showing, or evidencing such payment. And in the ultimate analysis it is as plain as daylight that this failure to file such voucher is the sum total of his offending, so far as this record discloses it. Granting for argument’s sake, but without deciding (not being called on here so to do), that the probate court had plenary power to re: quire defendant to file a receipt from the distributee showing the payment of this money to her, was the failure-to do so .criminal.; or to be a little more exact, was the proof of the fact of such failure prima-facie
It will be noted that no specific time is set for filing such voucher. The order merely requires that it be filed “as speedily as possibleAt what moment following the making of this order on the 9th day of September, 1912, and prior to the finding of the indictment herein on the 17th day of June, 1913, did the failure to comply therewith cease to be an innocent act and become a crime?
We are clearly of opinion that some showing should have been made of the conversion to his own use of this money by defendant, if in fact'he converted it, or of his investing it, if he did so, or of his making away with it, or secreting it, if this was the fact. The defendant may have had the money in the bank to his credit as administrator all the time for aught that appears, or he may in fact have paid it promptly to the distributee as he had been ordered to do by the probate court. As to all things negativing the fact of payment, as well as to anything proving the all ged fact of a conversion, the record is wholly silent, save and except as to the fact that no voucher was filed with the probate court. As stated, it was not shown that payment had not been made promptly to the distributee; neither was any demand for payment, nor any refusal to pay shown, nor any other single fact or circumstance showing a conversion. In such case what was said in the case of S+nte v. Francis, 199 Mo. l. c. 694, becomes apposite:
“When a conviction for crime is sought upon circumstantial evidence it must always be scanned with great caution and can never justify a verdict of guilty . . . unless the circumstances in proof are of such a character and tendency as to produce upon a fair and unprejudiced mind a moral conviction of'the guilt of the
"Whenever in our view there is substantial evidence of every element which goes to make up any given crime, however the great weight of the evidence may fall, or on whichsoever side the preponderance may be, we grant to the triers of fact the privilege of passing upon its credibility. [State v. Concelia, 250 Mo. 411; State v. Maggard, 250 Mo. 335.] But that is not the ease here. Every fact shown by the State may be absolutely true, and yet the defendant may be innocent. The presumption of innocence with which the law protects the defendant, shields and saves him till it is overcome by proof which as a matter of law makes a prima-facie case of guilt. This is the rule of law for a court; and it continues to be the rule of law till some substantial evidence is adduced to overcome it.
We can no better express this view, and the law of this case as well, than by quoting what was said by Judge Pox in the case of State v. King, 174 Mo. l. c. 662, where it was said:
“Viewing all the testimony in this cause, it is apparent that it is not that clear and convincing proof of the guilt of the defendant as authorizes his conviction. Its tendency, at most, is only calculated to create a suspicion that he was implicated in the commission of the offense.
“Defendants should not be convicted upon mere suspicions of guilt or even strong probabilities of guilt; to warrant their conviction, the testimony, when all considered, should be clear and convincing, entirely satisfying the minds and conscience of the jury. ■
‘ ‘ This defendant may be guilty; if so, the testimony fails to show it satisfactorily, and if he is, it is better that he escape than to make a precedent that must be general in its application to the guilty and innocent alike.
It results that for the refusal of the court to instruct the jury to acquit the defendant this case must be reversed and the defendant discharged, Let this be. done.