Commonwealth v. Williams

93 Pa. Super. 92, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 4, 1927
DocketAppeal 245
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 93 Pa. Super. 92 (Commonwealth v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Williams, 93 Pa. Super. 92, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283 (Pa. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Dan M. Williams, defendant below and appellant herein, was, during the year 1926, a dealer in automobiles in the City of Easton, trading under the name of Williams Motor Company. Among other cars on the floor of his show room on June 10, 1926, was a certain Chevrolet sedan. On that date Williams sold this car to Henry B. Shultz, receiving in exchange therefor an old car belonging to Shultz, valued at $50, and $882 in money. The money received by Williams for the car was applied by him to his own use. Some months later Williams became financially embarrassed and was declared a bankrupt. In March, 1927, a representative of the General Motors Acceptance Corporation, alleging that the car in question was the property of this corporation and that Williams was a bailee thereof and had fraudulently converted it to his own use, procured his indictment under section 108 *94 of the Penal Code of March 31, 1860, P. L. 408, for the crime of larceny by bailee. The portions of the section applicable to this case read: “If any person, being a bailee of any property, shall fraudulently take or convert the same to his own usé, or to the use of any other person, except the owner thereof,......he shall be guilty of larceny, and punished as is provided in the cases of larceny of like property,” The amendment of Miay 5, 1927, P. L. 776, to- this section does not affect this case in any way.

At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s evidence defendant’s counsel requested the trial judge to “direct a verdict of ‘not guilty’ ........ for want of sufficient evidence to support the charge in the indictment.” This motion was denied and the case submitted to the jury, which found defendant guilty. He now appeals from the sentence, assigning as error certain portions of the charge, and the refusal of his two points for chargé, which, in effect, requested binding instructions. At the trial the Commonwealth had the burden of showing, first, that the defendant was a bailee of the car, within the meaning of the section of the Penal Code under which the indictment was drawn; and, second, that he had fraudulently converted it to his own use. Hpo'n a review of the whole record we are satisfied that the question upon which this appeal turns is whether the defendant was a bailee of the car within the meaning of this penal statute. If the evidence for the Commonwealth fails to show that he was such a bailee, the second question becomes immaterial. The characteristics by which we are to distinguish a bailee of property, within the intendment of the Penal Code, from a vendee under a contract for the conditional sale thereof, were caréfully and fully considered by our Supreme Court in Commonwealth v. Chathams, 50 Pa. 181, and Krause v. Commonwealth, 93 Pa. 418, and in the latter case the duty of a trial judge in a case of this kind was also indicated. Speaking of the *95 defendant in that ease Mr. Justice Trunkey, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “Villainous as his conduct was, this conviction ought not to stand, unless he was a bailee within the intendment of the act. The word bailee is a legal term, to be understood in its generally accepted sense among jurists, and if it be doubtful whether a case be included it shall be excluded, in the construction of a criminal statute, ’ ’ and again, “In favor of the liberty of the citizen, the court may, and in a proper case, should declare the evidence insufficient to convict: Pauli v. Commonwealth, 89 Norris 432.”

We therefore address ourselves to a consideration of the facts proven by the Commonwealth (which, since the defendant offered no evidence, must be taken as true) and of the fair inferences deducible therefrom. We are not here concerned with the civil rights or remedies of the prosecutor against the defendant, but solely with the question whether a crime has been committed against the Commonwealth. The car in question was manufactured by the Chevrolet Motor Company and the General Motors Acceptance Corporation, the alleged bailor, is a finance corporation. Prom the testimony it appears that the finance company is owned by the General Motors Company, which also owns, among others, the Chevrolet Motor Company. The Acceptance Corporation finances the sale of cars by all the companies in the General Motors group.

In dime, 1926, the defendant came into possession of four automobiles, one of them being the car involved in tills case, under these circumstances: The four cars were shipped over the lines of a common carrier to Easton under an order bill of lading, in which the Chevrolet Motor Company was named as the consignee and the Williams Motor Company was designated as the party to be notified. The Commonwealth did not offer in evidence any of the records of *96 the common carrier, and the name of the consignor is not disclosed by the evidence. It is asserted in the brief for the Commonwealth that the Chevrolet Motor Company was also the consignor. In accordance with the usual business practice, the bill of lading, with a sight draft attached for the purpose of securing payment to the consignor before delivery of the automobiles by the carrier, was sent to the Northampton National Bank at Easton. There was also attached to the bill of lading a paper designated in the testimony as a “trust receipt” — consisting of two parts: the trust receipt proper and a promissory note, containing a warrant of. attorney to confess judgment, printed at the bottom — and a perforated sheet of forms referred to in the testimony as “release orders.” The bill of lading was endorsed in blank by the Chevrolet Motor Company. The defendant went to the bank and there signed the trust receipt and the promissory note, and the bank delivered to him the sight draft, the bill of lading and the release orders and mailed to General Motors Acceptance Corporation the trust receipt and promissory note. Under the endorsed bill of lading defendant obtained possession of the four automobiles from the common carrier.

Although the testimony for the Commonwealth is not as complete as it might have been, we think it is a fair inference from all the testimony that the General Motors Acceptance Corporation, acting through the bank, paid the Chevrolet Motor Company the amount of the draft drawn upon ’Williams or, in other words, financed the purchase of the four cars for him and attempted to secure itself against any loss by requiring Williams to execute the trust receipt and promissory note. It is also a fair inference from the evidence that the finance company never had physical possession of the cars. The material provisions of the trust receipt covering the four cars above mentioned read: “I (we) hereby acknowledge that said Motor Vehicles *97 are the Property of said General Motors Acceptance Corporation and agree to take and hold the same, at my (our) sole risk as to all loss or injury, for the purpose of storing said property; and I (we) hereby agree to keep said Motor Vehicles brand new and not to operate them for demonstrating, or otherwise, ....... and to return said Motor Vehicles to said General Motors Acceptance Corporation or its order upon demand; and to pay and discharge all taxes, encumbrances and claims relative thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 Pa. Super. 92, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-williams-pasuperct-1927.