160 P. 126 | Or. | 1916
Opinion by
It is contended that an error was committed in denying motions, interposed when the state had introduced its evidence and rested, and also when all the evidence had been received, to direct the jury to return a ver-. diet for the defendant, on the ground that the evidence disclosed the money alleged to have been misappropriated was paid over to him pursuant to á
“And you are hereby authorized to accept a deposit on the purchase price, and to execute a binding contract on our behalf. If the above-described property is sold within the life of this contract to any purchaser to whom you have submitted and offered the property during the term of this agreement, we hereby agree to pay you all over $3,250 that you sell for as commission, and you are hereby authorized to retain said commission out of any money which may be paid to you on account of said purchase price or as a deposit.”
The limitation thus prescribed, within which a sale of the property might be made, was orally extended by the owners from time to time. Pursuant to such authority the defendant advertised the property for sale for $4,000, whereupon Mrs. Elizabeth C. Ross, having seen the published notice, called at his office and inquired about the lease, the livestock and the hay. She then owned in Portland a house and lot, estimated to be worth $3,500, which real estate was subject to a mortgage of $800, and she desired to execute a deed of her home in part payment of the con
“Mr. Stiles, I don’t see what you fetched us down here for. This is-a cash proposition.”
He replied:
“Never mind that. Just leave that to me. We don’t have to have $2,000 cash.”
She also stated upon oath that in a day or two the defendant notified her he had prepared a contract for the purchase of the property and desired her to call and sign the agreement. She complied with the request, saying:
“When Mr. Stiles handed me the contract to sign there were certain things we had to meet before I could raise the $2,000, and Mr. Stiles understood this completely. I told Mr. Stiles ‘I don’t think I ought to sign that contract until I hear from Mr. Jackson.’ He was the man that held the $800 mortgage on my place at this time, and the one that I wanted to get it increased with. ‘If he didn’t come through with what I want, I can’t raise that $2,000.’ Mr. Stiles says, ‘Never mind, Mrs. Eoss, I am making about $500 a month. I will help you out of that if you can’t get it from Mr. Jackson.’ ”
She signed the contract May 16, 1914, then orally offering to pay $2,000 in cash and to give a chattel mortgage on the property as security for the remainder of the purchase price. She hoped by executing a new mortgage on her home for $2,300 to have $1,500 remaining after discharging the prior lien and
“This agreement entered into this 16th day of May, 1914, by and between H. A. Stiles, of Portland, Or., and Mrs. E. 0. Ross, purchaser, address 5204 43d St. S. E., Portland, Oregon, witnesseth: That H. A. Stiles, agent, agrees to sell, and the aforesaid purchaser agrees to buy the stack of feed and implements on the John A. Nelson farm, 1% miles west of Warren, Or., according to a list already submitted, and take over the lease now held by F. F. Waffle and associates, subject to confirmation by owners, for the purchase price of $4,000, including the rent to April, 1915 (dollars) upon the following terms: $2,000 cash when papers are ready, balance to be arranged, and a part of the old hay and hogs that may be sold is to be applied on the balance when sold and subject to as many conditions and restrictions as may run with the land. It is further agreed that Mrs. Ross is to have' credit for the hogs and calves, etc., that has been sold off the farm by F. F. Waffle. H. A. Stiles hereby acknowledges receipt of $200, May 19th (dollars) as earnest-money and part of the purchase price, which*502 deposit shall be returned in case owner does not confirm sale.
“H. A. Stiles, Agent,
. “By B. A. Stiles.
“Mrs. E. C. Boss, Purchaser.”
Mrs. Boss further testified that upon paying $2,000 on the purchase price of the property she expected to secure the remainder by giving a mortgage upon the stock, implements and crop; that she did not understand the chattel mortgage was not satisfactory; that she paid the $200 on Mr. Stiles ’• word that if a further loan could not be secured from Mr. Jackson the defendant would help her; that failing to get the money from the mortgagee, Mr. Stiles could have obtained from another source a loan upon her home of only $1,250; that if he had been able to secure a loan of $1,850 she, with the help of Mrs. Fisher and Mr. Allison, could have raised the $2,000 required by the terms of the contract; that when the defendant ■heard from Mr. Jackson and she was notified he could not let her have the money, she abandoned the idea of giving a chattel mortgage; that no bill of sale of the stock, etc., was ever tendered to her, no demand made upon her for a commission; that the $200 which she paid had never been returned to her; and that the proposed sale was never confirmed.
Her testimony is corroborated in most particulars by that of F. E. Olson, a son-in-law, who went in the automobile with her to examine the property offered for sale and who was also with her May 16,1914, when she signed the contract. This is the substance of the testimony which was received when the first motion for a directed verdict was interposed.
F, F. "Waffle, a witness for the defendant, was interrogated on direct examination as follows:
*503 “I will ask you to state whether or not on the 19th day of May of this year you saw that contract.”
He replied:
“Mr. Stiles showed me the contract, hut I didn’t read it. He told me that he had received $200 from Mrs. Ross under certain conditions, if she could put the deal through, and she could put the deal through if I would accept her terms; but I didn’t read this at that time.
“Q. Did you confirm the sale as he had reported it to you?
“A. Well, no.
“Q. What did you tell him?
“A. He told me that Mrs. Ross could pay us $2,000 cash, if we would give her time on the balance, and I says, ‘What security will she give?’ And he says, ‘A chattel mortgage on the stock.’ I told him, No, I couldn’t accept a chattel mortgage on the stock, but I would accept the $2,000 cash, if she could give us security, bankable notes, or a first'mortgage on Portland real-estate, and he said he thought he could put it through that way.
“Q. Then the provision in the contract of the $2,000 cash, and the balance to be arranged, that was approved by you?
“A. In that way; that I would accept—
“Q. To be arranged satisfactorily to you?
“A. Yes, sir; with the proper security.
‘ ‘ Q. The sale was confirmed then, as far as you were concerned, according to that arrangement; $2,000 cash and the balance to be arranged to your satisfaction?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And did Mr. Stiles have authority to retain the $200 that was paid on the purchase price?
“A. Not from me; no.”
The witness was further interrogated as follows:
“Q. This is the contract that you had with bi-m; is it not? Examine that paper. Do you recognize those signatures?
*504 “He answered: Yes, sir; those signatures are correct. There is one mistake here, the amount of the price, $3,250. It should read $3,650. Oh, I understand; that was in addition to the lease. I think we covered that. * #
“Q. Would you have sold to Mrs. Ross, if she had complied with the terms of this contract of $2,000 cash and a satisfactory arrangement for the other $2,000?
“A. Yes, sir.”
J. W. Hammond, a witness for the defendant, testified that as a loan broker he, about the middle of May, 1914, at the request of Mr. Stiles, examined the house of Mrs. Ross and offered to make a mortgage loan thereon of $1,850, but he never thereafter heard anything about the matter. Mr. Hammond’s testimony is corroborated by that of Mr. Stiles who, in referring to Mrs. Ross, says:
“As soon as she paid me the deposit, I immediately got in my machine, after talking with Mr. Hammond, and found I could raise the money on mortgage on her property, and I went down there and talked with Mr. Waffle”
—informing him that Mrs. Ross was going to pay $2,000 in cash and proposed to give a mortgage on the property offered for sale as security for the remainder of the purchase price, which offer was declined by Mr. Waffle who demanded negotiable paper which could readily be converted into cash; that when the witness found there was a mortgage of $800 on the house of Mrs. Ross, it was then ascertained she did not have sufficient funds with which to complete the contemplated purchase.
Mrs. Ross testified that when she learned she was unable to secure any further loan from Mr. Jackson, the man who held a mortgage of $800 on her home, she called upon the defendant to whom she said, “Mr.
“If Mrs. Boss had given you $2,000 cash and had given yon a bankable note of Mr. Olson’s, secured by a mortgage, or any other person, for $2,000, you would have transferred the property to her, would you not, described in that contract?
“A. Yes, sir.
*507 “Q. And Mr. Stiles would have kept the $200, would he not?”
An objection to this question having been sustained and an exception allowed, it is maintained that an error was committed in not permitting the witness to answer the inquiry. In discussing this ruling it is stated in the brief of defendant’s counsel:
“We contend that the defendant was entitled to this evidence. One of the essential features of a prosecution for larceny is the intent with which the property is retained, and the answer of the witness, Waffle, was relevant to be considered by the jury in determining the question.”
In State v. Chapin, 74 Or. 346 (144 Pac. 1187), it was held that under Section 1956, L. O. L., making it larceny for any bailee of money, etc., to wrongfully convert or neglect or refuse to deliver or account for the money bailed, etc., according to the trust, intent to defraud was not an element of the crime. The decision in that case is conclusive on this point, showing that no error was committed as alleged.
“If yon find from the evidence in this case that Waffle, the owner, consented to and approved the terms of the contract of sale at or about the time the same was signed, then I charge yon the sale was confirmed according to the terms of the contract, and there would be no larceny by the defendant in retaining the money in controversy and yon should acquit the defendant. ’ ’
This instruction assumes that Waffle’s offer to take mortgages of real property in Portland, Oregon, as security for $2,000, upon the payment of a like sum in money, was accepted by Mrs. Ross. This seems to
“I charge you that under the terms of the contract in evidence when the money, $200, was delivered to the defendant, the title passed with the possession, and the retention of the money would not constitute larceny, and you should acquit the defendant.”
What has been said on the denial of the motion for a directed verdict is controlling as to this requested instruction, in refusing to give which no error was committed.
“Now, the word ‘bailee’ is used in this indictment. When property is delivered by one person to another with the understanding that the identical property or its equivalent is to be returned to him, the person who delivered the property is called the bailor, and the one to whom it is delivered is called the bailee; and so in this case if the defendant received the money as alleged in this indictment, he would be the bailee.”
It is argued that this part of the charge, though correctly stating a legal proposition, was not based on any testimony, and hence was abstract and misleading. Unless an instruction is predicated on evidence which has been received, it is unrelated to the case on trial and usually erroneous: Pearson v. Dryden, 28 Or. 350 (43 Pac. 166); State v. Weaver, 35 Or. 415 (58 Pac. 109); State v. Hogg, 64 Or. 57 (129 Pac. 115); Oberlin v. Oregon-W. R. & N. Co., 71 Or.
“If, then, the state has proved to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the sale was not confirmed, and that the $200 were delivered by the complaining witness to the defendant, and that the defendant failed to return the money to the complaining witness on demand, and contrary to the provisions of his trust, then it would be your duty to find a verdict of guilty as charged in the indictment.”
The concluding part of this instruction, and to which no exception was taken, reads:
“But if, on the other hand, the state has failed to prove to you beyond a reasonable doubt these various propositions, then it would be your duty to find a verdict of not guilty.”
The question presented by the last instruction to which an exception was taken is discussed in considering the motion to direct a verdict for the defendant, and needs no further elucidation.
The judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.