Koppe v. State

153 N.E. 109, 21 Ohio App. 33, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 715, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 497
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 109 (Koppe v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koppe v. State, 153 N.E. 109, 21 Ohio App. 33, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 715, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 497 (Ohio Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Maxtor, P. J.

Koppe was indicted, tried, and convicted of embezzling $400, which came into his hands as mayor of the city of Logan. Judgment was entered on the verdict, and he now seeks to reverse that judgment.

The indictment was returned under Section 12873, General Code, and the $400 charged to have been embezzled was a fine, or fine and costs, collected by Koppe, as mayor, in certain cases prosecuted to judgment in his court, where one Ben *35 Brown had been found guilty of violating an ordinance of that city.

It is urged in this proceeding that the court erred in not sustaining a motion of the defendant to take the case from the jury at the conclusion of the state’s testimony, and it is also argued that there was error prejudicial to the accused in the instructions to the jury.

The record shows that the defendant was at the time the mayor of the city of Logan, and as such mayor that he, in the course of his official duty, collected from Ben Brown the sum of $400. It is shown that this money was paid to Koppe in cash, in June, 1923, in the presence of the prosecuting attorney and others. It is further shown that for the month of June, 1923, and for several succeeding months, Koppe made a monthly report to council, as required by Section 4270, General Code, of the moneys which had been received by him as such mayor, and that no mention was made in any of those reports of the $400 collected by him from Ben Brown. For some of the months after May, Koppe seems to have been delinquent in making his reports and settlement with the city auditor, and late in the fall the auditor asked him why he did not turn in the money as the law required. She further asked him what he would do when the state examiner should come, to which she testifies that he made no answer, and in response to a suggestion of hers said that he did not care. The state examiner began an examination of the mayor’s books in October, 1923, and after he had been pursuing his investigations for some time, in a conversation with Koppe, he inquired about a *36 number of eases on the mayor’s docket, among others about the cases of Ben Brown, and particularly asked Koppe if Ben Brown had paid his fine, or any part of it. Koppe replied that no part of it had been paid. Some time later the examiner confronted Koppe with the receipts evidencing the payment by Brown of these fines, and thereupon the accused said that he had received the money, without making any explanation or other statement relating thereto. While the docket kept by the mayor showed all the other proceedings in the Ben Brown cases, there was nothing on the docket indicating that the fines in question had ever been paid, nor were such entries ever made until the examiner directed that they be made, after Koppe had admitted the receipt of the money.

In addition to the foregoing, a number of witnesses were placed on the stand, whose testimony tended to show that they had paid money to the accused for the benefit of the' city, and that he had appropriated these various payments to his own use, all of which, of course, was for the purpose of showing the intent with which he had kept the money received by him from Brown.

It is now argued that these facts do not make a case upon which the state was entitled to go to the jury, because, in not showing what Koppe did with the Ben Brown money the state did not show that he had converted it to his own use.

It has been decided a great many times that the mere retention of moneys not belonging to him by a private agent or public officer does not constitute embezzlement, and that some further fact must be shown before the complete crime is proved.

*37 Sometimes the actual conversion is shown by the application of the funds to the agent’s own particular use, as it was in the case of State v. Baxter, 89 Ohio St., 269, 104 N. E., 331, 52 L. R. A., (N. S.), 1019, Ann. Cas., 1916C, 60. Sometimes it may be shown by the agent’s failure to respond to a timely demand made upon him by his principal, or some other person authorized to make the demand. Wortman v. State, 18 Ohio App., 283. But without, for the moment, passing upon the effect of Section 4270, General Code, it seems clear to us that in this case there was abundant evidence of conversion, when the defendant denied his receipt of the Ben Brown funds. To such effect is Edelhoff v. State, 5 Wyo., 19, 36 P., 627, where the Supreme Court of Wyoming held that an agent collecting rents was guilty of the complete act of conversion when he had received a month’s rent on a particular house and had falsely reported the house to be vacant and no rent collected therefor.

The instant case is one of the embezzlement of public funds, and is the offense denounced by Section 12873, General Code. Section 12467, General Code, covers the embezzlement of private funds. Both sections, however, use the words “converts to his own úse” in describing the gist "of the offense. The Supreme Court was considering the embezzlement by a private agent, rather than a public officer, in State v. Bailey, 50 Ohio St., 636, 36 N. E., 233, but was considering precisely the same language, to wit, “converts to his own use,” under which this indictment was brought. In that case the Supreme Court said, page 646 (36 N. E., 236):

*38 “Beyond doubt, if the agent, with his employer’s money in his pocket, should, upon demand, deny his receipt of it at all, or, admitting its receipt, refuse to account for it to his employer, or in any other way manifest his purpose to convert it to his own use, such conduct would constitute a conversion and complete the crime.”

When, therefore, it was shown that the accused had received the fine in question, and subsequently denied such receipt, there was enough evidence to carry the case to the jury. It is, of course, true that his receipt and denial did not necessarily prove an embezzlement. It was evidence, but it was not conclusive. It tended to show guilt, but such tendency might be destroyed by evidence explaining his denial. Without explanation, however, his denial, made to one who had a right to inquire, constituted some, evidence of á conversion of the funds. For this reason alone the trial court might have refused to arrest the case at the conclusion of the state’s testimony.

There was another reason, however, for overruling the motion to arrest, founded upon the application to the facts of certain statutory provisions. If the court was right in giving the instructions complained of, it was right in submitting the case to the jury, and right in sustaining the verdict of guilty.

One paragraph of the court’s charge complained of was this: “If you find that the sum charged to have been embezzled by the defendant in this case, or some portion thereof, was made up of fines and costs assessed and collected by the defendant in cases charging a violation of the said *39

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 109, 21 Ohio App. 33, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 715, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koppe-v-state-ohioctapp-1926.