134 Iowa 587 | Iowa | 1907
The contention for appellant is that, where a statute creates an offense described in general terms constituting a legal conclusion, the indictment thereunder must specifically describe the offense, and bring it within the legal conclusion. But, if an act of a particular description is made criminal, nothing further need be alleged in the indictment than the doing of the specific act. Under such circumstances, it is sufficient to follow the language of the statute in describing the act charged. State v. Johnson, 114 Iowa, 430; State v. Dankwardt, 107 Iowa, 704; State v. Porter, 105 Iowa, 677. The conversion itself is the act, and nothing further need be alleged by way of description. This is the ruling in State v. King, 81 Iowa, 587, with reference to a conversion of public moneys. The court in that case says: “ The gist of the offense is the wrongful conversion of the public, money, and it is wholly immaterial and mere surplusage to state whether the defendant used it in paying his debts, in purchasing property, had it on deposit in bank, carried it on his person, or loaned it to others; and the fact that three different modes of concealing the money are set forth in the indictment is wholly immaterial.”
Cases relied upon by counsel for appellant holding that it is necessary in an indictment of an officer for embezzling public money to charge that it is unaccounted for are not in
No question was raised by the motion for a new trial, which the court overruled, that is not disposed of by the previous discussion, save the contention that the verdict is without support in the evidence. We think there is ample evidence to support the verdict, and we see no occasion to interfere with the'conclusion reached by the jury.
The judgment of thé trial court is therefore affirmed.