Lewis v. Kendall

6 How. Pr. 59
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 How. Pr. 59 (Lewis v. Kendall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Kendall, 6 How. Pr. 59 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

Mason, Justice.

This cause comes before the court on a demurrer. I propose in the first place to consider whether the matters stated in the answer of the defendant would constitute a defence if they were properly pleaded; or, in other words, whether the converting of two dollars of the twelve thus intrusted to the plaintiff in the manner and under the circumstances stated in the answer of the defendant, constitutes a criminal offence. If it is a criminal offence it is embezzlement, and falls within the 59th section 2 R. S. page 678, which provides, in substance, that if any clerk or servant of any private person shall embezzle or convert to his own use, or take or make way with, or secrete with intent to embezzle or to convert to his own use, without the assent of his master or employer, any money, goods, &c. belonging to any other person, which shall have come into his possession or under his care by virtue of his employment, he shall upon conviction be punished, &c. The answer sets up, in short, that the plaintiff was in some capacity in the service of the Syracuse and Utica Rail Road Company as a baggage man, or servant, and running or being upon said rail road and cars of said [61]*61company from Syracuse to Utica, through the village of Canastota in the town of Lenox, to Utica and back; and he, the said Lewis, so being in such service, the said defendant did before the alleged speaking of the said words, and on or about the 10th day of November, at Canastota aforesaid, deliver to the said Lewis in a written unsealed letter, containing therein $12 in money in bank bills, to deliver to Wm. C. Butler in the city of Utica, to whom the said letter was addressed, to be applied by said Butler on account of said defendant, for the sale to defendant of camphene gas, and that defendant at the same time delivered to the plaintiff a tin can, to take to said Butler, for the purpose of receiving therein a quantity of camphene gas for said defendant, to be brought back to him on said cars, and that defendant at the time gave plaintiff two shillings for his trouble; and the answer charges the plaintiff with embezzling two dollars of the $12 thus delivered to him. It appears to me that the statute was not intended to embrace such a case. Our statute is not as broad as the English statute, and seems to me, taking the whole statute together was only intended to apply to persons in the ordinary situation of clerks or servants having a master to whom they are accountable for the discharge of the duties of their situation; and that the casually procuring a person to receive money in a single message and pay it out, or to receive it, will not constitute a case of a servant’s receiving such money by virtue of his employment as servant or clerk, and consequently is not within the statute. Roscoe in his Criminal Ev. page 399, edition of 1840, says the casually procuring a person to receive a sum of money will not render that person “ a person employed for the purpose, or in the capacity of clerk or servant.”

In the case of Rex vs. Freeman (5 Carr, & P. 534, and 24th Eng. Com. Law, 444), which was a case where the prisoner had worked for the prosecutor, sometimes as a regular laborer and sometimes as a roadsman, but at the time in question, not being at all in the prosecutor’s service, he was sent by the prosecutor to get a check cashed at a banker’s, for doing which he was to be paid sixpence. He got the cash and made off. The court [62]*62held it no embezzlement, as the prisoner was not the servant of the prosecutor within the meaning of the statute. This case was decided in 1833, and is cited with approbation by Roscoe in his Criminal Evidence, page 399. The same doctrine is laid down in Ray vs. Moe, C. C. 259; and Barber in his Criminal Treatise, lays down the rule in the following language: “Nor is an embezzlement by one who is neither clerk nor servant, or in any way under the control of the person by whom he is in a single instance only requested to receive money, punishable under this act” {Barb. Grim. Treat. 144). I know there are cases in England which hold a contrary doctrine. In one case it was held a man was sufficiently a servant within the English statute, although he is only occasionally employed when he has nothing else; and there are cases which hold that it is sufficient if he was employed to receive the money he embezzled; although receiving money may not be in his usual employment, and although it was the only instance in which he was so .employed (Rex vs. Spencer, R. & R. C. C. 299; 2 Russ. C. & M. 210; Rex vs. Hughs, M. C. C. R. 370. See also 1 Harr. Digest, 20 35, and 20 36, and cases there referred to). I am free to confess that I have not been able to satisfy myself, on a careful examination of the English statute, that it embraced such cases, or was ever intended to; and it is a familiar rule that criminal statutes should receive a strict construction.

Our statute, however, has not received so extended a construction, and I trust will not. It was said by Mr. Spencer, who was one of the revisers that framed our statute, that a stage driver entrusted by his employer to carry money from one place to another, was not a servant within the meaning of the statute (The People vs. Levaron, 10 Wend. 298). The court, however, held such driver to be a servant within the meaning of the statute; and so it was held in the case of The People vs. Dutton, that a bar-keeper entrusted to carry a letter to and from the post office, who fraudulently converts to his own use a letter enclosing money, given him to carry to the post office, is guilty of embezzlement under the statute (15 W. R. 581).-

It will be seen, on looking at the statute under consideration, [63]*63that it only embraces the case of a clerk or servant of a private person, while it embraces the case of any officer, agent, clerk or servant of any incorporated company.

Can it be maintained then that Lewis was the servant of the defendant in this instance, within the meaning of this statute1? I do not think it can. The answer alleges that he was in some capacity in the service of the Syracuse and Utica Rail Road Company as a baggage man, or servant, being and running upon the cars of said company from Syracuse to Utica, and the most that can be said of the defendant’s employment is that he constitutes him his special agent to carry the letter and money to Utica and deliver it to Butler and get some camphene gas in his can and bring it back to him, the defendant, and upon the allegations contained in this answer he continued the servant of the company, and became nothing more than the special agent of the defendant in this transaction; and it seems to me it would be a perversion of language to call him a hired servant of the defendant in such a case. The question arises then,, did the plaintiff receive this money as the officer, agent, clerk or servant of the rail road company, and did the money come into his possession, or under his care, by virtue of snch employment or office which he held for the said rail road company. I have not been able to discover any averments or allegation in the defendant’s answer which would show that it did.

There is nothing in the pleadings showing that the plaintiff’s employment as servant for this company was to do errands of this kind, or carry money for individuals in this way. I infer on the contrary, from the pleadings, that such was not his employment by the company.

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Bluebook (online)
6 How. Pr. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-kendall-nysupct-1850.