Orebaugh v. State

11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 603, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 198
CourtHamilton Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 603 (Orebaugh v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orebaugh v. State, 11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 603, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 198 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

The plaintiff in error was indicted under Section 6842, Revised Statutes, for embezzlement .as agent, whereas the proof showed his employment as attorney at law, and the receipt of the money in that capacity. A motion was made at the conclusion of the evidence to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the accused on the ground of such variance.

In charging an offense in an indictment, the language of the statute defining^the crime or its equivalent, which plainly and necessarily includes it, must be used, and it has accordingly been held in Hagar v. State, 35 O. S., 268:

“An indictment charging that the prisoner broke into a storeroom, is insufficient' under a statute making it an offense to break into a ‘ storehouse, ’ .and the defect is available to him, although the objection was not made until the verdict had been rendered. ’ ’

An attorney at law is not necessarily an agent within the ordinary meaning of the term, and the distinction is shown by McIlvaine, J., in Campbell v. State, 35 O. S., 70, at 75:

“The controlling difference between the relation of attorneys, auctioneers, warehousemen, etc., with their employers, and the defendant with the employer, is this: the former engaged in an independent employment, subject only to the usages of their different line of business, while the latter was subject to the direction and control of his employer. And while the former may not be subject to the penalties of this statute, the latter is clearly embraced within its terms and meaning.”

In that case the defendant was charged as agent with embezzlement under a statute that' did not include attorney at laiv. but which was so amended in 1881 (78 O. L., 186).

The Supreme Court having recognized the distinction between an agent and an attorney at law under a statute defining embezzlement, and the Legislature having’ since amended the stat[605]*605ute so as to make it an offense for an .attorney at law to convert to his own nse anything of value which shall come into his possession by virtue of his employment as such attorney at’ law, the decisions in other states are not controlling, and especially when they are far from uniform.

The statute now includes guardian, executor, administrator and assignee in insolvency, all of whom act in a representative capacity, yet it will hardly be claimed that proof of conversion of money in either capacity will sustain an indictment for such conversion as agent. The capacity in Avhieh the money or other thing of value is received and appropriated -is of the essence of the offense, which must be proved as charged in the indictment, and the defendant is not required to meet .a different charge although, if properly laid, constituting an offense under the statute. We are of opinion th'St the variance between the statement in the indictment and the evidence offered in the proof thereof was material to the merits of the ease and prejudicial to the defendant. ’ That the decisión' of the trial judge hpon this question may be reversed if erroneous is expressly held in State v. Buechler, 57 O. S., 95.

Judgment reversed and prisoner discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 603, 1909 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orebaugh-v-state-ohcircthamilton-1909.