In re Frank

107 F. 272, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 332
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 107 F. 272 (In re Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Frank, 107 F. 272, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 332 (D. Or. 1901).

Opinion

BELLINGER, District Judge.

This is a proceeding on behalf of the province of British Columbia, brought under the treaty between the United States, and Great Britain, for the extradition of one Eli Prank, charged with the crime of embezzlement, committed in Victoria, in said province. The treaty between the two countries under which this proceeding is brought provides that:

“The respective judges and other magistrates of the two governments shall have power, jurisdiction, and authority, upon complaint made under oath, to issue a warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive or person so charged, .that he may be brought before such judges or other magistrates, respectively, to the end that the evidence of criminality may be heard and considered; and if, on such-hearing, the evidence he deemed sufficient to sustain the charge, it shall be tbe .duty of the examining judge or magistrate to certify the same to -tlie proper executive authority, that ai warrant may issue for the surrender of such'fugitive.”

[273]*273Section 5270 of the Revised Statutes provides a proceeding in substantial conformity with the terms of the treaty under which this proceeding is brought.

The charge, in substance, is that Frank, the defendant, being an employé or agent of the firm of Lenz & Leiser, wholesale merchants doing business at Victoria, for the sale of goods of that firm at Dawson, on the Yukon river, converted to his own use certain moneys belonging to the firm, and aggregating about $10,000. The defendant, by his attorneys, questions the authority of the agent claiming to represent the provincial government to demand his extradition. He further contends that it does not appear that the alleged conversion was committed in the province of British Columbia, and finally that the moneys which the defendant is charged with having embezzled are partnership funds, in which he has an interest as partner. I am satisfied that the authority of the agent of the provincial government of British Columbia is sufficient to warrant the extradition of the defendant if the evidence, under the laws of this state, can be deemed sufficient to sustain the charge. There is room for question, under the facts, as to the jurisdiction in which the alleged conversion took place; but as to this I am of I he opinion that the failure to turn over to the firm of Lenz & Leiser, at the city of Victoria, upon his return from Dawson, within a reasonable time, is sufficient to warrant an inference of conversion by the defendant of the funds in his keeping. The firm of Lenz & Leiser seems to have had considerable doubt upon this question, if not upon that of partnership, inasmuch as these proceedings were not instituted until a period of nearly six months had elapsed from the time when the defendant arrived in Victoria, during one month of which time the defendant, Frank, was in and about the city of Victoria, and in the place of business of Lenz & Leiser. It appears that during this time the defendant endeavored to have what the attorneys representing him in Victoria at the time call a "settlement” of the particular matters in question, and that he employed such attorneys to that end; that the firm, on its part, consulted attorneys, whose a.dvice seems to have discouraged the criminal prosecution of the defendant. The material question to be considered is, are the facts in the case sufficient to sustain the charge made? The treaty provides that the evidence of criminality must be shown according to laws of the place where the fugitive so charged shall be found. It is conceded that in this state, upon the principle of the common law, the general rule is that the ownership of the property alleged to have been embezzled must not be in the accused, either in whole or in part, and that, if the defendant was a partner in the business from which the fund in question was derived, he cannot be held for embezzlement.

In view of the importance of the case, I feel warranted in entering upon a minute examination of the testimony received upon the hearing. Two witnesses testified in support of the charge. They were allowed to state facts, conclusions, and impressions in their own way. The first of these witnesses is S. G. Spence, who testified that he had been engaged for Lenz & Leiser, in the firm of S. G. [274]*274Spence & Co., doing business at Dawson in the sale of merchandise furnished by the firm of Lenz & Leiser; that in the early part of last year an arrangement was entered into between Lenz & Leiser, the witness, and the defendant, Frank. The witness explains what that arrangement was, as follows:

“Mr. Lenz spoke to me about going in with bim [Frank], and he said, ‘We will divide the profits with you.’ „I stated to Mr. Frank that the business last year 'was carried on under the name of Spence & Co., and that we would leave it the same as that, and he said, ‘All right.’ ”

■ The witness testified that Frank left Victoria some time about the 1st of March, and went to Dawson. Spence left Victoria the 15th of March, and arrived in Dawson on the 15th of April, and opened store. Frank had left Dawson for Victoria, and consequently had passed Spence on the road. The store was opened on the 18th of May, and a large part of the goods disposed of before Frank arrived, which was on June 3d. Frank left again for Victoria on the 30th of June. Spence gave him $2,601 in currency and dust, proceeds of the sale of the merchandise of Spence & Co., which Spence says “he was to take to our house and turn it over, and the balance was to be forwarded to him, at White Horse”; that $7,908 in gold dust was forwarded to Frank, at White Horse, by the hand of a Mr. Hirschberg. He testified that this money was the property of Lenz & Leiser, to whom the goods from which the money was derived belonged. The witness further testified that when Spence & Co. got short of goods at Dawson they would buy goods from others, when they could turn them over and make some money by doing so.

It áppears from the testimony of Mr. Lenz, of the firm of Lenz & Leiser, that the defendant, Frank, had been a successful dealer at Dawson, and had done business with his firm for a number of years; that the firm had supplied him with merchandise at different times for the Yukon trade, upon his credit, in large amounts, for which he made prompt payment. His credit was good, and the firm would not have hesitated to trust him with goods on his own account, and in fact did so just prior to the business arrangement out of which the difficulty which has resulted in this proceeding grew. During the year 1899 Lenz & Leiser established a business at Dawson under the name of Spence & Co. The members of this company were S. G-. Spence, a Mr. Gutman, and Lenz & Leiser. Desiring to carry on business at-Dawson during 1900 as they had done during the previous year, Lenz & Leiser invited Frank to participate in the .business at the latter point. Lenz testifies that this was not a partnership. As to the interest Spence was to have in the business, the witness said: “We never discussed the matter very thoroughly. We intended to divide our share of profits with him.” He further testifies that the firm of Lenz & Leiser paid the freight on the goods as far as ITtalingua, and that he believes that Mr. Spence borrowed the balance of the money for the freight; that the goods were covered by insurance in the name of Lenz & Leiser. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F. 272, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frank-ord-1901.