Foster v. State

43 A. 265, 18 Del. 111, 2 Penne. 111, 1899 Del. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 18, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 43 A. 265 (Foster v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. State, 43 A. 265, 18 Del. 111, 2 Penne. 111, 1899 Del. LEXIS 13 (Del. 1899).

Opinion

Boyce, J.,

(delivering the opinion of the Court):

The indictment upon which Mahlon B. Foster, the plaintiff in error, was convicted, was found under the first section of an act, entitled, “An act concerning embezzlement and defalcation by corporate officers and others,” being Chapter 153, Volume 16, Laws of Delaware, as amended, which declares “ that every cashier, servant, agent, or clerk to any person, or to any body corporate, or being employed for the purpose, or in the capacity of a cashier, j [113]*113servant, agent, or clerk, by any person, or body corporate, who shall embezzle, fraudulently abstract, or misapply any money, goods, bill, note, bond, check, evidence of debt, or other valuable security, or effects, which, or any part whereof, shall be delivered to, or received, or taken into possession by him, or to which he has access for, or in the name, or on account of his master, or employer, although such money, goods, bill, note, bond, check, evidence of debt, or other valuable security, or effects, was not received into the possession of such master, or employer, otherwise than by the actual possession of his cashier, servant, agent, clerk, or other person, so employed, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor,” etc.

The indictment contains three counts. The State, at the trial, relied upon the last two counts, they, each, averring the defendant to have acted as the “agent” of Margaret H. Wells, the prosecutrix.

The money, with the embezzlement of which the defendant below is charged, is a certain sum of money of the value of one hundred and thirty dollars, it being a part of the proceeds of a certain promissory note which from the evidence the prosecuting witness was made and delivered, on or about the 26th day of May, 1897, under the following circumstances:—Being in need of money, she made application to one Harry Ramsberger, a tenant of hers, who had on former occasions assisted her, when in like need. He was at that time unable to accommodate her, but recommended that she make two promissory notes for $125 and $240, respectively, to the order of Foster, the plaintiff in error, whom she did not then know, she agreeing to pay $25 and $40 for the negotiation of the notes, respectively.

The notes were made as recommended and delivered by the prosecutrix to Ramsberger, at the same time, under similar circumstances, and without any consultation or understanding with Foster by the maker, to hand to Foster for negotiation, for the purpose of procuring money for the maker of the notes. Shortly after having received the notes, Foster negotiated the smaller note, and paid out of the proceeds thereof to the prosecutrix through Ramsberger, the [114]*114sum of $100, that being the amount stipulated which she should receive out of that note. The negotiation of the $240 note was delayed until the early part of June following, when Foster endorsed it to one William H. Wickersham, and received therefor, on the 7th day thereof, a credit on the books of the latter on account of an unpaid book account which Foster owed him, and, in addition thereto, the sum of eighty dollars, and on the 11th day thereof, Foster was paid the further sum of $36.32 on the note, making the cash amount which he received thereon, the sum of $116.32, or, as testified to by Wickersham, the sum of $120 less the discount. For the balance of the note, the amount of which the evidence does not disclose, Foster was to receive some new goods of Wickersham.

It is assigned as error (among other assignments thereof) that the Court refused the motions made at the close of the testimony for the State, and again at the close of the testimony in the case, for peremptory instructions to acquit, (1) because,” as alleged in the prayers therefor, the defendant was not, in the transaction complained of, the agent of the prosecuting witness;” (2) because the defendant was not the cashier, servant, agent, or clerk of Mrs. Wells, the prosecuting witness, nor was he employed for the purpose, or in the capacity of cashier, servant, agent or clerk by said prosecuting witness within the meaning of Chap. 153, Volume 16, Laws of Delaware, being the statute against embezzlement.”

The exceptions to the record thus made were argued before us under assignments of error, Nos. 1 and 3, 2 and 4, contained in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error. We shall consider them somewhat together, dealing at first, more particularly with the last two, which perhaps, raise the most important question involved in this case.

Assuming for the present that the relation of principal and agent, in the transaction complained of, did exist between the prosecuting witness and the defendant below, the quéstion still remains whether that relation, it being for a single transaction, is such in its character and duration as is contemplated by the statute.

This question having been raised for the first time, perhaps, in [115]*115our courts, and particularly in this Court, it may not be inappropriate to review to some extent the history, character, and purpose of the earlier acts against embezzlement, and by so doing we may reach a more correct interpretation of our statute against the offense.

Both here and in England statutes have been enacted for the purpose of supplying defects in the common law of larceny, so as to reach and punish the fraudulent conversion of money or property which could not be reached by the common law. Larceny involves the element of an original unlawful taking, and differs from embezzlement in that it is the wrongful conversion of property where the taking and possession are lawful, the person of the wrongdoer and the property converted being .within the terms of the statute. And many of the authorities speak of embezzlement as a sort of statutory larceny.

10 Amer. and Eng. Ency. Law (2d Ed.), 980.

It is a purely statutory offense, unknown to the common law; yet, in this State, as mostly elsewhere, it is a separate and distinct offense from larceny. It is necessarily so with us, for our statute makes the offense a misdemeanor, while larceny is a felony.

It has been said that the whole doctrine of embezzlement has evolved from the first two modern English statutes, enacted to reach the wrong. The first of which (39 Geo. 3, c. 85) was enacted in 1799, and it provided that “if any servant, or clerk, or any person employed for the purpose, or in the capacity of servant, or clerk, to any person or persons whomsoever, or to any body corporate or politic, shall, by virtue of such employment,” (the italics are ours) “receive or take into his possession * * * for or in the name or on account of his master,” etc. This statute was superseded by 7 and 8 Geo. 4, c. 29, See. 47, which was substantially the first statute in a more compact form. The latter enactment has been superseded by 24 and 25 Vict., c. 96, Sec. 68, and it declares “ whosoever, being a clerk or servant, or being employed for the purpose, or in the capacity of a clerk or. servant, shall fraudulently embezzle any chattel, money or valuable security, which shall be delivered to, or [116]

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 265, 18 Del. 111, 2 Penne. 111, 1899 Del. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-state-del-1899.