199 P. 285 | Mont. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was convicted.of grand larceny, and appealed from the judgment and from an order denying him a new trial.
Paraphrased, the information charges that on December 20, 1918, the defendant, while acting as cashier of the Rosebud State Bank, and having in his possession as bailee a United States Liberty Bond, No. 673169, of the value of $500, and the property of Hugh Lynch, did feloniously appropriate the said bond to his own use, with intent to deprive the true owner of his property.
During the summer of 1918 the campaign was conducted throughout the country for sale of bonds of the Third Liberty Loan. The general plan of that campaign is a matter of public history, and need not be considered. In and about the town of Bosebud, subscriptions were obtained by the card system in use. Each of several subscribers indicated that he would make payment on his subscription to the Bosebud State Bank, of which institution the defendant was cashier and active manager. When these particular cards were collected, they were turned into the bank which made its subscription to the Federal Beserve Bank at Minneapolis for bonds of the denominations and in the aggregate amount corresponding to the individual subscriptions. Each subscriber to one of these cards agreed to purchase the bond, or bonds, indicated, and to pay into the Bosebud State Bank the face value thereof, either in a lump sum or by the installments authorized. by the government. The bank, by its subscription, agreed likewise with the Federal Beserve Bank to purchase the bonds indicated by its subscription, and to pay therefor upon the installment plan. The bank made its several payments, and received the bonds into its custody. It is not made certain by the record whether every individual subscriber fully paid his subscription into the bank. It does appear that many of them did not pay promptly as the installments became due, and that the bank was compelled to advance the money; but for the purpose of this case we may assume that everyone met his obligations by the time the bonds were received by the Bosebud Bank.
The information herein was filed February 11, 1920. The allegations of that information material to a determination of questions presented by these appeals are: (1) That on December 20, 1918, Hugh Lynch was the owner of Liberty Bond No. 673169; (2) that defendant then had the bond in his possession, custody, or control as bailee; and (3) that defendant then converted the bond to his own use with the felonious intent to deprive the true owner of his property. The evidence, as exhibited by the foregoing résumé, fails to prove, and does not even tend to prove, any one of these allegations.
But there is a stronger reason for our conclusion. Lynch’s subscription amounted to an offer to purchase one $500 bond. The bank’s subscription for the total of the individual subscriptions constituted an offer to purchase, and a promise to pay for, those bonds, which, upon acceptance by the government, became a binding contract (sec. 5084, Rev. Codes), and upon the completion of payment by the Rosebud Bank and the delivery of the bonds by the government a sale was consummated. The legal title then passed from the government to the Rosebud Bank in trust, however, for the individual subscribers to the extent of their respective subscriptions completed by payment to the bank. Notwithstanding the fact that the bank was trustee, it held the legal title to these bonds until the trust was executed by the delivery of the bonds to the individual subscribers in June, 1919, and it was in the actual possession of them until they were delivered to the Miles City Bank. Under no circumstances, therefore, can it be said that Lynch was the owner of the particular bond No. 673169 on December 20, 1918.
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court of Rosebud county, with directions to dismiss the information and discharge the defendant.
Reversed.