Lipscomb v. State

114 So. 754, 148 Miss. 410, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 81
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1927
DocketNo. 26078.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 So. 754 (Lipscomb v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lipscomb v. State, 114 So. 754, 148 Miss. 410, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 81 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On an indictment for embezzlement, the appellant, Lipscomb, was convicted and sentenced to a term of five years in the penitentiary. The indictment charged that Lipscomb embezzled and converted to his own use, as the clerk, agent, and) servant of Lee M. Harris, money, bank notes, checks, bills of exchange, and promissory notes *417 to the amount of about three thousand dollars, by virtue of his employment as such agent of Harris.

This record is so voluminous, as well as the briefs filed by counsel in the case, and the whole record so demonstrates the correctness of the verdict of the jury as to render it unnecessary for us to undertake to detail fully the evidence in the case.

The appellant filed a suggestion of error, assigning eighty grounds for reversal, which we shall not undertake to set out, but shall group them on the main points argued in the brief.

Lee M. Harris employed B. 0. Lipscomb in July, 1922, to work for him; Harris being engaged in the casualty insurance business which had been conducted by him for many years in Meridian, Miss. Harris was agent of several insurance companies, and, as such agent, his business consisted in writing and issuing policies of casualty, plate glass, and boiler insurance, and also in issuing fidelity and other kinds of bonds in behalf of the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company.

Harris was the only witness who gave the details of the oral contract of employment made between him and Lipscomb at the time of his employment. Lipscomb did not testify in his own behalf, and the testimony of Harris is to the effect that he (Harris) employed Lipscomb, the defendant, as clerk, bookkeeper, and cashier, a general clerk in the office, Harris ’ testimony being as follows:

“ Q. State the terms of the employment. A,., He was to work for. me on a commission basis. It was a verbal contract — no written contract. I was to pay him twenty-seven and one-half per cent, of the net commission; that is, the net profits of the business.
“Q. What do you mean by net commissions? A. That is, after we deduct all of the legitimate expenses —commissions paid other agents, and thing's like that.
“Q. All right, in return for such compensation, what was Mr. Lipscomb to do for your business ? A. He was *418 to keep the books, help collect the money, solicit business, and do anything’ else be was called on to do.
“Q. Well, did that contract remain in force during the whole time of bis employment1? A., No, sir.
“Q. When did be cease to work for you? A. .March 15, 1925,
“Q. And be began, you say, when? A. July, 1922,
“Q. Between that time what change was made, if any, in the compensation that you allowed Mr. Lipscomb?' A. I increased bis compensation on February 1, 1923, to thirty per cent, of the net commissions — the net profits.
“ Q. You raised bis wages from twenty-seven and one-half per cent, to thirty per cent, then? A. Yes, sir.”

Early in the year 1923 Harris became ill, and for a long time was unable to give personal, attention to his business. He made thirty-two trips to New Orleans to the hospital, and was in the office only a short time. When Harris was able to evince an interest in his business, in the early part of 1925', finding his bank account depleted, he desired an audit of his books, and thereupon Lipscomb left his employ. Two audits of his books were made, one by Crook on the assumption that the entries on the books in the office, and on the deposit slips, were correct, and that audit resulted in his ascertainment that Lipscomb’s shortage with his employer, Harris, amounted to more than one thousand eight hundred dollars. The other audit was a checking up of deposit slips and books with the bank books and books of customers, and disclosed a further shortage amounting to more than one thousand two hundred dollars.

The state, in tracing the -funds paid into the hands of Lipscomb for Harris, did so with great particularity, and the amounts so traced varied, at times, from five dollars to more than one hundred! dollars, the entire record disclosing to us. the fact that when Harris became ill, Lipscomb began a systematic appropriation to' his own use of the funds of Harris, and an adroit concealment of his *419 (Lipscomb’s) peculations by false entries in reference to items and checks received, saying, when asked by the auditor and Harris, concerning same, “I got that, and did not turn it in,” and, “That is another one of those things,” but offering no explanation, and making no denial, and no claim of right to the money. As an instance of his system, he would collect the full amount .due from a customer, and credit the account with part payment instead of the full amount paid, and would make two deposit slips, one to take to, and leave with, the bank, appearing to be an original, and another appearing to be a copy, which reduced the amount of the cheeks received. In some instances, the difference between the deposit slips was taken in cash by Lipscomb at the bank, which amount so thus taken would be, on the same day, cred>-ited to Lipscomb’s private account. There were other instances where he collected money and made no entry at all, and these sums exceeded twenty-five dollars in more than one instance. In other words, there was a shameless taldng, and an adroit concealment, from the employer, Harris, of the true condition of his customers’ accounts, and of the proceeds of collections made by Lipscomb for Harris. Lipscomb had almost exclusive management of the insurance business, and he undertook to conceal his shortage by false entries on the books of Harris, and by false deposit slips, which deposit slips, the ledger accounts, and customer’s accounts would be alike, but would be unlike and totally different from the deposit slips delivered to the bank with deposits of currency, drafts, and checks of customers given in payment of their accounts. The entries made by Lipscomb show a systematic betrayal of this trust by a trusted employee with his absent and* sick employer.

The business of Harris, was conducted under the sign “Lee M. Harris.” People of all stations in life, bankers and customers, who dealt with Harris, all testified that the business was conducted and known as the business of Lee M. Harris. The witnesses’ statements were to the *420 effect that Lipscomb so stated, and that he complained because Harris would not give him a partnership in the business. No disinterested witness tsetified to anything in contradiction of this state of affairs, save two relatives, who testified' for the defendant that Harris had stated to them that Lipscomb was a partner in the business. .

It is evident to our mind, from the entries made on deposit slips and books, and the deposits in the bank, that Lipscomb kept a separate account for himself of his peculations, and- we think this is clearly demonstrated by the fact that the false entries would be.

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 754, 148 Miss. 410, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipscomb-v-state-miss-1927.