109 Kan. 239 | Kan. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
E. H. Johnson appeals from a conviction upon four counts charging him with embezzling money of the Railroad Men’s Refining Company, a corporation of which he was the president.
The defendant introduced no evidence. The evidence of the state tended to show these facts: The charter of the corporation provided that its general offices should be located in El Dorado. It carried a deposit in its own name in a bank situated there. Checks upon this deposit were drawn from time to time signed with the name of the corporation by E. H. Johnson, president. These checks were paid by the bank and charged against the deposit. In four instances — to which the four counts corresponded — in which such checks were drawn their proceeds, or a part thereof, was used by the defendant for his own purposes and not for the benefit of the corporation.
“There is no more reason why courts should allow themselves to be misled by mere names and shadows in the administration of justice in criminal, than in civil cases. Calkins, under and by virtue of his employment, had the wheat in the warehouse of his employers so far under his care and in his possession and control as to give him the power to make an efficient transfer of title to any part of it to any person -who should become the bona, fide purchaser of a grain order issued by him in the name of Baldwin — a transfer of title effective in favor of the holder of such order, and against his employers. This power he used to divest his employers of their property, and to put the proceeds of it into his own pocket. We think he had all the care of the property which the statute contemplates, and that when he clandestinely transferred the title of wheat from the railroad company to an innocent holder of a grain order and appropriated the proceeds thereof to.his own use, the act of embezzlement was complete.” (Calkins v. The State, 18 Ohio St. 366, 371.)
“The secretary of a corporation cannot escape liability under said statute by the fact that, under the by-laws of the company, the treasurer was the custodian of its funds, where such by-laws were disregarded in the conduct of the business, and the funds converted actually came to the possession of the secretary.” (People v. Butts, 128 Mich. 208, Syl. ¶ 3.)
“Nor have we any doubt that the money converted was in their [the defendants’] possession, and in the possession of each of them, within the meaning of the statute. They were directors of the company charged with the control of its property, and the checks of each, when drawn upon its'funds, were honored without question.” (People v. Lay, 193 Mich. 476, 489.)
“Funds payable upon money orders drawn by a postmaster or clerk having authority to issue the same in the regular course of his official duty may be deemed to be intrusted to such postmaster or clerk in the sense that, if wrongfully converted by him to his own use, he is guilty, of the crime of embezzlement. Such funds are in fact subject to his official order; that is, they are set apart by the government for the payment of money orders issued by him, and are thus intrusted to his official care, although they may not be in his actual custody.” (United States v. Royer, 122 Fed. 844, 845.)
*243 “The defendant'was the general manager of the elevator in which the grain was stored. He had complete control of the grain. He had power to cause it to be transferred from one elevator to another, and must he held, we think, to have had the wheat in his possession, custody, and control as the agent or officer of the elevator.” (People v. Sherman, 16 N. Y. Supp. 782, 784.)
The fact that the business was not handled in the way provided by the written regulations on the subject does not give the defendant immunity. A city clerk has been held guilty of embezzlement with respect to money paid to him which should have been paid to the city treasurer instead (The State v. Spaulding, 24 Kan. 1), and a city treasurer, with respect to money illegally collected from violators of the liquor law {The State v. Patterson, 66 Kan. 447, 71 Pac. 860). Inasmuch as the defendant had and exercised the actual power to get the money out of the bank by signing checks he cannot be heard to say in defense to the charge against him that authority to do so had not been legally conferred upon him. (See notes, 23 L. R. A., n. s., 761; 3 Ann. Cas. 844.)
*245 “For the purposes of this case, we shall assume that the construction of the statute contended for by the defendant is the proper one, namely, that the term 'money’ was used by the legislature in a specific sense. In other words, it means legal-tender coin, and also paper issued by the government, or by banks by lawful authority, and intended to pass and circulate as money. It is insisted on behalf of the accused that, under the foregoing definition, he did not embezzle money — actual coin or currency — belonging to the state. It is true the state had no specific coins or currency in the possession of the Omaha National Bank, as it had made no special deposit of money in said bank. The state, at the time of the delivery of the check in question to the bank, had on deposit therein, under the depository law, money in excess of the amount found by the jury to have been embezzled, which constituted the bank the debtor of the state to that amount. ... To constitute embezzle-, ment it was not necessary that the defendant himself should have acquired the physical or manual possession of the money. He, by his cheek, authorized and directed the bank tp pay the money called for therein. . . . The bank was thereby empowered to select and transfer the money to the payee, which in contemplation of law it did, although there was’ no actual handling of a dollar in the entire transaction.” (Bartley v. State, 53 Neb. 310, 337, 338.)
“The several acts and matters elemental, directly or indirectly, of the purposed conversion of the state’s money were but means to the end, and had reached their final accomplishment when, pursuant to the order of the check, the moneys of the state were paid out or transferred, not for its use or uses, but to perfect, to close and render entirely effectual the misappropriation of the money to the use or uses of the plaintiff in error.” (Same case on rehearing, 55 Neb. 294, 297.)
The judgment is affirmed.