Lewis v. People

60 P.2d 1089, 99 Colo. 102, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 29, 1936
DocketNo. 13,614.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 1089 (Lewis v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. People, 60 P.2d 1089, 99 Colo. 102, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 193 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Young

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in error, Thomas L. Lewis, Miles G. Saunders and Ethel L. Westcott, named as defendants in a criminal information filed in the district court of Pueblo county, were charged with the embezzlement of $15,329.21 of the personal property, goods, chattels and monies of the Railway Savings and Building Association, a corporation. A change of venue was granted and the case was tried in Kiowa county. We will herein refer to them as defendants.

The defendants were convicted of the crime charged and on this review assign numerous errors upon which they rely for a reversal of the adverse judgment of the district court.

The record in the case is voluminous, consisting of twenty-seven volumes and the abstract fills more than a thousand pages, but in all the evidence introduced there is little, if any, conflict. The errors assigned are based on the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to establish the crime chargedthe admission of evidence alleged to be incompetent, over objection; the giving of instructions which, defendants say, were erroneous; refusal of the court to give tendered instructions; and its failure to inquire of the jurors, when the verdict was read purport *106 ing to be signed by their foreman and to be their verdict, whether it was in fact their verdict. The evidence, which necessarily must be stated in some detail, was to the following effect:

The Railway Savings and Building Association was incorporated in 1902, and continued as a going concern until a receiver was appointed to take charge of its business July 6, 1932. Prom its organization until 1909, one Parker was the secretary and manager. The defendant Lewis was employed as bookkeeper and manager to succeed Parker, was elected a member of the board of directors in January, 1910, and continued on the board until the receivership. He served as secretary until 1925 and as manager until the receivership. During’ the time Parker was manager of the association he received as such officer a commission on all stock sold by the association. Out of this commission he paid his subagents.

The by-law with reference to the duties of manager and in effect during the period of time covered by the evidence, is as follows: “ Manager: The Manager shall have full charge of the sale of stock; also of all agents’ accounts, making such terms therewith as may be deemed to the best interests of the Association. He shall perform such other duties as may be imposed upon him by the board of directors. ’ ’

The commissions on the sale of stock at first were $1.50' a share as disclosed by the minutes of the company. Later they were raised to $2, and then reduced to $1.50, and though no minute to that effect appears, the defendants testified that in 1916, by action of the board, commissions on the sale of stock were again raised to $2. This testimony is corroborated by that of H. E. Clucas, a witness for the prosecution, and a member of the board from 1905 until the receivership, who testified that he sold stock for the company during all that period of time, that for at least fifteen years he had drawn a commission of two dollars a share, and that during that period of time he had sold hundreds of shares. That such action was taken fur *107 ther appears by a resolution passed by tbe board and under wbicb one Homer J. Kendall was employed as general agent. Reference is made to tbis resolution as the Kendall resolution and it was entered on tbe minutes of a directors’ meeting September 8, 1916. One paragraph reserved to tbe individual members of tbe board of directors a full two per cent commission on any shares that such board members might sell, tbe paragraph being as follows: “Provided that said terms [referring to tbe terms stated in tbe contract] shall not apply to any stock sold or subscriptions obtained personally by individual members of tbe Board of Directors, but that in such cases said two per cent shall be allowed and paid to tbe individual director selling tbe stock or obtaining tbe subscription. ’ ’

People’s witness Counts, an expert accountant, testified that from bis inspection of tbe books of tbe association tbe charge of two dollars per share first beg’an to be reflected in tbe books after July 5,1916. He further testified that tbe two dollars appeared on tbe books as a capital deduction, and that it also appeared from tbe books of tbe company that tbe first manager, Parker, and bis successor, Lewis, bad drawn what are described as overriding commissions, being tbe full commission authorized less such commission as was paid to tbe subagent selling tbe stock, from tbe inception of tbe company. At a directors ’ meeting on January 28, 1905, tbe minutes, among other things, show tbe following: “ On motion of Gr. M. N. Parker, the sum of $2 per share was allowed him for tbe use of selling stock, wbicb commission shall be paid in lieu of an expense account. ’ ’ At that time Parker was tbe secretary and manager of tbe association. It further appears from tbe testimony of tbe people’s.witness Counts that the fact that Lewis was receiving commissions on tbe sale of stock appears on tbe books as kept by tbe company in seven different places.

Tbe people introduced tbe testimony of various employees in tbe office of the company who also were stock *108 holders in the association to the effect that they had no knowledge that Lewis was drawing overriding commissions ; bnt the evidence is clear that Clara Pearson, who testified for the people, had figured these commissions, that a number of other employees had been shown how to figure them and that at various times they had computed the amount of commissions and overriding commissions payable to the defendant Lewis.

In the early history of the association and until 1912 Samuel D. Trimble served as its attorney and was paid a fee for the examination of abstracts. Under the rules of the association a prospective borrower was required to pay a fee of $10 for examination of abstract and appraisal, which fee was later raised to $15. When an abstract was received by the association if the $10 was paid by the applicant for the loan, it was enclosed with the abstract and sent to the attorney as his fee for the examination. If it was not sent in by the applicant a slip was placed in the cash drawer, and $10 taken out, pinned to the abstract, and sent to the attorney for the examination. When the loan was completed the $10 taken from the cash drawer was replaced and charged against the amount of the loan. No record ever was made on the books of the company showing the $10 and later $15 item paid for abstract examination to be income of the company. The defendant’s witness, Purcell, an expert accountant, testified that he was familiar with the practice of fourteen Colorado associations; that thirteen of them handled the abstract fees in this manner; and that the fourteenth kept an account of the fees because two attorneys were employed, but that such fees were not considered as income of the association. This same practice with reference to these attorney fees was followed after defendant Saunders became attorney for the company, succeeding Samuel D. Trimble in 1912, and until the association went into the hands of a receiver.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 1089, 99 Colo. 102, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-people-colo-1936.