Autry v. State

92 So. 2d 856, 230 Miss. 421, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 385
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1957
Docket40410
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 856 (Autry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Autry v. State, 92 So. 2d 856, 230 Miss. 421, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 385 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

*425 Bobeeds, P. J.

Douglas Autry, the appellant, was County Superintendent of Education of Benton County, Mississippi, for a term beginning January 1, 1952, and ending December 31, 1955. He was convicted in this proceeding of embezzling school money of that county.

He says the testimony was insufficient to sustain the conviction. He requested, but was refused, a peremptory instruction. On this appeal he urges us to discharge him.

He was jointly indicted with IT. M. Bowland and F. P. Wren. A severance was granted Autry. The proof on behalf of the State strongly tended to establish that, on December 20, 1954, F. P. Wren was operating at Holly Springs, Mississippi, a retail gasoline station known as Gulf Oil Company, at which he also sold automobile supplies and repair parts; that on that day Bow- *426 land and Autry came to Ms station and requested Mm to lend them $400; that he was reluctant to do that because he needed to use the money he had on hand to purchase gasoline. However, Rowland and Autry were his friends, so he absented himself and arranged with his local gasoline distributor, from whom he purchased his gasoline, to grant him credit for the next tank of gasoline which he might purchase; he returned to the station and told Rowland and Autry he had arranged to lend them the money; that Rowland and Autry said they would repay him $600 for the $400 they were then borrowing from him; that he gave the money to Autry, who signed a check, which Rowland endorsed, but which was to be held until Rowland and Autry returned with the money; and that about January 20, 1955, Autry and Rowland returned to his station. They had in their possession a school warrant numbered 572 which had been issued and signed by Autry as County Superintendent of Education of Benton County for the sum of $630.00, the payee being Gulf Oil Company (Holly Springs), and was payable out of the school funds of the county. It was dated January 20, 1954. It is agreed that the year should have been 1955. The error as to the year is unimportant in this case. The warrant recited that it was in payment of three thousand gallons of gasoline used in the operation of the public schools of the county. Wren did not want to accept the warrant. He wanted cash money. Autry said this was the best he could do, so Wren accepted the warrant. He gave Autry $24 in cash; retained five dollars and some cents for gasoline he had just placed in the tank of the automobile for Autry and Rowland, and, according to Wren, “I started to give them the change and they said keep the change.” Wren did keep $600. Wren endorsed the warrant and cashed it through the Bank of Ashland, the county depository. He redelivered to Autry the check Autry had given him on the first visit.

*427 The comity did not owe Wren, or his gasoline station, or the Gulf Distributor at Holly Springs, for gasoline or anything else. Of course, no bill or invoice was sent to the county by eitlrer of the foregoing. The county never received any gasoline. The county lost the $630, and Autry and Rowland appropriated to themselves four hundred and twenty-nine dollars and some odd cents, money of the Benton County 'school funds, as a result of these manipulations.

Naturally, most of the testimony for the State relating to the foregoing transactions was given by Wren. However, the warrant itself and the records of the bank and of the county established, or greatly aided in establishing, many of the material facts about which Wren orally testified, and these records, in addition, proved, without contradiction, other pertinent facts bearing upon the guilt or innocence of Autry, — for instance, that Autry caused the county board of education to innocently authorize the issuance of the warrant in payment of three thousand gallons of gasoline supposedly sold and delivered to the county.

Autry, testifying in his own behalf, denied that he appropriated to his own use the $630, and also denied the making of the arrangement Wren said was made and carried out, yet he admitted that he presented the claim to the county board of education; also admitted that he issued and signed the warrant; and admitted that Benton County did not owe the payee in the warrant, and that the payee did not have airy claim against the county, and that when he presented the claim to the county board for a]3in*oval he falsely represented to the board that the mouev was owing the Gulf Oil Company. He said the warrant should have been payable to Rowland Brothers, of which partnership TI. M. Rowland was a member, but he chose to make it payable to Gulf Oil Company for the reason that he had been criticized for the extensive purchases of school supplies he had made as *428 county superintendent of education from Rowland Brothers.

Autry introduced two witnesses besides himself hut their testimony related to an audit of the county school affairs and its transmittal to the chancery clerk and to Autry, and his knowledge, or lack of knowledge, thereof. The testimony of these two witnesses had little bearing upon the pertinent facts involved in the guilt or innocence of Autry.

The indictment charged that Autry, aided and abetted by Rowland and Wren, did knowingly, fraudulently and feloniously embezzle and convert to his own use $630, the property of Benton County, while he, Autry, was acting in his official capacity of county superintendent of education of said county, by fraudulently and feloniously issuing a false school warrant, (setting out a copy of the warrant) knowing- at the time no money was owing to Wren or the Gulf Oil Company (Holly Springs), and that by such issuance of said school warrant he did defraud and cheat Benton County and embezzle the school money of said county.

The main reason the verdict is not supported by the evidence, according- to Autry’s contention, is that the principal witness against him was Wren, an accomplice. It is true that the testimony of an accomplice should he weighed with care and caution, yet it is also true that such testimony alone may he sufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty. Yol. 5, Miss. Digest, Criminal Law, Section 508 (9), 509 and 510. In this case, as above shown, the admissions of Autry and the records of the bank and of the county constitute strong corroborating- evidence of that given by Wren.

It is very clear, it seems to us, that the jury was amply justified under the evidence in this case in finding that Autry was guilty of the charge made against him.

*429 Autry applied for a continuance of the case to the next term of court. The application was denied. He says that was reversible error.

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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 856, 230 Miss. 421, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/autry-v-state-miss-1957.