Davenport v. State

1921 OK CR 1, 202 P. 18, 20 Okla. Crim. 253, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 3, 1921
DocketNo. A-3388.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 1921 OK CR 1 (Davenport v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. State, 1921 OK CR 1, 202 P. 18, 20 Okla. Crim. 253, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 162 (Okla. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

STEWART,

Special Judge. R. G. Davenport, plaintiff in error, hereinafter called defendant, was convicted in the district court of Seminole county of embezzlement and sentenced to a term of seven years’ imprisonment in the state penitentiary and to pay a fine of $5,021.10. He was tried and con- *256 vieted upon an information in which Mace Herndon, county treasurer, Yernon Kiker, deputy county treasurer, and himself, were jointly charged with the commission of the offense. On application, the trial court ordered a severance, and the defendant appeals to this court from the judgment of conviction.

The defendant complains that the information upon which he was tried is insufficient in that there is no averment that the property alleged to have been embezzled did not belong to the defendant and that he was not entitled to the same.

The defendant was prosecuted under section 7437, Revised Laws 1910, for advising, aiding, and knowingly participating in alleged acts of the county treasurer and deputy county treasurer in converting money and property of the state, county, and political subdivisions of the county, intrusted to the keeping of such officers, to their own use and to the use of the defendant. Section 7437 reads:

“If any county treasurer, or other officer or person charged with the collection, receipt, safe-keeping, transfer or disbursement of the public money, or any part thereof, belonging to the state or to any county, precinct, district, city, town or school district of the state, shall convert to his own use or the use of any other person, body corporate or other association, in any way whatever, any of such public money, or any other funds, property, bonds, securities, assets or effects of any kind received, controlled or held by such officer or person by virtue of such office or public trust for safekeeping, transfer or disbursement, or in any other • way or manner, or for any other purpose; or shall use the same by way of investment in any kind of security, stocks, loan property, land or merchandise, or in any other manner or form whatever; or shall loan the same, with or without interest, to any person, firm or corporation, except when authorized by law; or if any person shall' advise, aid, or in any manner knowingly participate in such act, such county treasurer, or other officer or person shall be deemed guilty of an embez *257 zlement of so much, of said money or other property, as aforesaid, as shall be converted, used, invested, loaned or paid out as aforesaid; and upon conviction thereof, such county treasurer or other officer or person shall be sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor for a term of not less than three years nor more than twenty-one years, arid also to pay a fine equal to double the amount in money or other property so embezzled as aforesaid; which fine shall operate as a judgment lien at law on all the estate of the party so convicted and sentenced, and shall be enforced by execution or other process for the use of the person whose money or other funds or property as aforesaid shall have been so embezzled; and in all cases such fines, so operating as a judgment, shall be released or entered as satisfied only by the person in interest, as aforesaid.”

The Legislature unquestionably had the power to enact that the malfeasance of officers intrusted with public property and money as set forth in the section quoted should constitute the crime of embezzlement, and that any person advising, aiding, or in any manner knowingly participating therein is guilty of the same crime. Therefore, in determining whether or not the information states an offense, we must look to this particular legislative enactment, and not to the law relating in general to embezzlement. An indictment or information which sets out the elements of the offense as contemplated in the foregoing statute and in substantial compliance with the language of the section would be sufficient.

The information now before this court is verbose, replete with repetition, lengthy, and tedious. Perhaps it would not serve as a model of excellent pleading, but we think it was sufficient to place the defendant on trial. To set the same out in full would greatly incumber this opinion, which, on account of the numerous questions raised by learned counsel for defendant, must necessarily be extended, and would serve no useful purpose. The prosecution grew out of an alleged un *258 lawful conversion by the defendant in collusion with Mace Herndon, county treasurer, and Vernon Kiker, deputy county treasurer, of Seminole county, of certain tax sale certificates to lands bid in by the county at a delinquent tax sale held by the county treasurer and the subsequent appropriation of the redemption money paid by the owners of the land to the county treasurer in the sum of $2,510.55 to the use of the defendant, and of the officers named by show of fraudulent assignments of the tax sales certificates to the defendant, executed by Mace Herndon, county treasurer. The information contains all the averments required by the statute under consideration, necessary to charge the offense against the county treasurer and his deputy, and also charges that the defendant, Davenport,,knowingly, willfully, wrongfully, fraudulently, and feloniously connived with, aided, and advised the county treasurer and participated in the proceeds of a check for $2,510.55 given to said Davenport by the county treasurer purporting to be in payment of the redemption money received from the owners of the lands to redeem tax sale certificates so assigned to Davenport; said check being drawn upon and paid out of funds held by the county treasurer and belonging to the state of Oklahoma, Seminole county, and the political subdivisions thereof. The information alleges that the money received by the defendant belonged1 to the state of Oklahoma, Seminole county, and the subdivisions thereof, and that' the tax sale certificates were the property of and belonged to the state of Oklahoma and county of Seminole and subdivisions thereof.

The office of an information, so far as concerns the defendant, is to apprise him of all matters necessarily inhering in the crime which the state expects to establish by the evidence as being committed by the defendant, and, if such matters are pleaded so as not to mislead the defendant, he is in no position to complain. In the case at bar, can it be said that the averments in the information would lead the defend *259 ant to believe that he was being prosecuted for purloining or embezzling his own property? The substantial rights of the defendant must always be protected; the right to a fair trial is paramount; but, in the light of modern jurisprudence, it is time for those seeking protection from the courts to refrain from threadbare and hypercritical objections having no reasonable foundation and which tend to impede rather than to accelerate the wheels of justice. If an averment in the information in the present case to the effect that the property did not belong to the defendant were necessary, the allegation that the property belonged to the state of Oklahoma,. Seminole county, and the subdivisions thereof, sufficiently negatives ownership in the defendant.

The defendant next urges that the information shows on its face to be barred as a matter of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK CR 1, 202 P. 18, 20 Okla. Crim. 253, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-state-oklacrimapp-1921.