Barclay v. Breckinridge

61 Ky. 374, 4 Met. 374, 1863 Ky. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 9, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 61 Ky. 374 (Barclay v. Breckinridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barclay v. Breckinridge, 61 Ky. 374, 4 Met. 374, 1863 Ky. LEXIS 80 (Ky. Ct. App. 1863).

Opinion

JUDGB BULLITT

delivered the opinion oe the court:

McLaughlin, a clerk of Tilford & Barclay, private bankers, converted to his own use $1,500 of their money, which he charged upon their books to Marshall, a depositor. Afterward, to avoid detection by his employers, he stated the facts and ,his motive to Marshall, and solicited a loan of that amount of money, stating that his employers would overhaul their books in a few days, and that, if he could not effect the loan, he would be detected and ruined. Marshall refusing to lend the money, McLaughlin finally suggested that he could probably get the note of the appellees for the amount, and asked Marshall if he would advance the money upon it, which Marshall promised to do. McLaughlin then applied to the appel-lees, and obtained their note payable to Marshall, five days after date, for $1,500. It does not appear what statements McLaughlin made to the appellees, nor whether they had knowledge of his object in obtaining the note; but it seems clear, from the evidence, that they executed it for his accommodation and to enable him to obtain its value from Marshall. Marshall advanced the money upon it, and afterward called on Tilford & Barclay “to receive the money upon it,” and stated to them the facts before mentioned. Barclay said he could not advance the' money on the note, assigning no reason therefor, but told Marshall that his brother, the appellant, would buy it, and that any arrangement that Marshall and the appellant would make would be perfectly satisfactory, and that Marshall should not have any trouble about it. Marshall sold the note to the appellant for $1,470, and assigned it without recourse.

[376]*376■ This is an action upon said note. The appellee, Breckin-ridge', the principal in the note, answered, in substance, that McLaughlin had embezzled the funds of Tilford & Barclay, and been detected by them; that they gave him time to return the money, promising to conceal the embezzlement if he should do so, and threatening, if he should fail to do so, to prosecute him for his embezzlement; that he, with their knowledge, informed Marshall of said embezzlement, and that Marshall advanced the money on the note upon a secret promise of indemnity by Tilford & Barclay; that they promised the appellant to purchase the note; that they are, and all the time have been, the real owners of it; and that the advancement of the money by Marshall, and his sale of the note to appellant, were mere devices to conceal the fraudulent combination between Tilford & Barclay, Marshall and McLaughlin, for the procurement of the note of the appellees.

Barclay appeals from a judgment dismissing his petition.

It is clear, that the statements of the answer, if sustained by proof, constitute a valid defense; even if),McLaughlin had not committed a felony. But there is no proof of the alleged fraudulent combination between Tilford & Barclay, Marshall and McLaughlin, to obtain the note. It does not appear that Tilford & Barclay had any knowledge or suspicion of the defalcation of McLaughlin, until informed of it by Marshall, after he had advanced the money upon the note. Nor does it appear that Marshall had any. motive to defraud the appel-lees, because, though he had' been charged on Tilford & Barclay’s books with the $1,500 abstracted by McLaughlin, the charge was nugatory, and Marshall’s claim on Tilford & Barclay, for the amount of his deposits, was as perfect as if it had not been made.

It may, perhaps, be inferred, from the evidence, that Marshall promised McLaughlin not to disclose his defalcation, and that he advanced the money on the note to enable McLaughlin to avoid detection. But, as he made no fraudulent representations to the appellees, and had no knowledge of such representations having been made by McLaughlin, and it does not appear that such representations were made, the appellees [377]*377have no right to complain of him for advancing the money on the note, which they executed for the purpose of enabling McLaughlin to procure its value from Marshall, and they certainly were liable to Marshall, unless the abstraction of the money by McLaughlin was a felony.

Assuming that the appellees were liable to Marshall, the facts, that Tilford & Barclay, upon this disclosure concerning McLaughlin, determined to save Marshall harmless, and that they, for that purpose, induced the appellant to buy the note, agreeing to indemnify him, cannot relieve the appellees from liability.

But, if McLaughlin had committed a felony, we incline to the opinion that the appellees did not become liable to Marshall, who probably advanced the money to enable McLaughlin to conceal his crime and to stifle a prosecution against him; and it is clear that the appellant occupies no better attitude than his assignor, Marshall.

The question, then, is, whether or not McLaughlin had committed a felony.

Whether the money was intercepted by him after being deposited, and before reaching the vault or drawer of his employers, or was taken therefrom, or was placed in his hands by his employers, does not appear. If he took it from their vault or drawer he was guilty of larceny by the common law. But we cannot assume that he took it from the vault or drawer, because the answer charges that he embezzled it. Moreover, if his interception of money, deposited, before it reached the vault or drawer, or his use of money placed in his hands by his employers, was not a felony, it must be presumed that he got it in one of those ways, rather than that he committed a felony by taking it from the vault or drawer. Assuming that he intercepted money deposited before it reached the vault or drawer, or used money placed in his hands by his employers, the question is, was he guilty of the crime of embezzlement?

Chapter 28, article 12, of the Revised Statutes, contains the following provisions:

“§ 1. If any director, or officer, or servant, of any incorpo[378]*378rated bank, or any officer of public trust in this State, or any officer, agent, clerk, or servant of any incorporated company, embezzle or fraudulently convert to his own. use, bullion, money, bank notes, or other security for money, or evidences of debt, or claim, or any effects or property of another person which shall have come to his possession, or been placed under his care or management as such officer, he shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than five nor more than ten years.”
“§.2. If any carrier, porter, or other person, to whom money or other property or thing, which may be the subject of larceny, may be delivered, to be carried for hire, or any other person who may be intrusted with such property, embezzle or fraudulently convert to his own use, or secrete with intent to do so, any such property, either in mass or otherwise, before delivery thereof to the person or at the place to whom the same were to be delivered, he shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than five years.”

It is clear that the 1st section has no application to this case, as McLaughlin was not an officer of a corporation, nor of a public trust. We quote it only to show the difference between its provisions and those of section 2, which is relied on to show that McLaughlin committed a felony.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ky. 374, 4 Met. 374, 1863 Ky. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barclay-v-breckinridge-kyctapp-1863.