People v. Lavan

6 N.W.2d 721, 303 Mich. 394
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1942
DocketDocket Nos. 70, 71, Calendar Nos. 41,852, 41,853.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 721 (People v. Lavan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Lavan, 6 N.W.2d 721, 303 Mich. 394 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

North, J.

Defendants Martin Lavan and Hyman Levinson appeal from convictions by a jury of the crime of larceny by conversion, charged under Act No. 328, § 362, Pub. Acts 1931 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, §17115-362, Stat. Ann. §28.594). The information filed against them reads:

“That heretofore, to-wit, on the 21st day of April, A. D. 1938, at the city of Lansing'and in the county of Ingham aforesaid one Martin Lavan and Hyman Levinson, late of the city of Lansing and county of Ingham aforesaid, being persons to whom certain money, to-wit:
“$7,600 belonging to another, namely Pontiac News Company, a copartnership consisting of James Little and Ben Bonan, had been delivered, did through and by means of a fraudulent and felonious conspiracy between themselves and with others unknown, embezzle and fraudulently convert to their own use a part thereof, to-wit, $2,600, in violation of section 362 of the Michigan penal code.”

*396 A second count, charging that the two defendants embezzled this money as agents of Little and Eonan was dismissed just before the case went to the jury, and the verdict of the jury limited the convictions to the offense of larceny by conversion.

The charges herein arose from the circumstances under which the publisher was designated and the contract made for the publication of delinquent tax sales notices in Oakland county for the year 1938. Defendants are charged with converting part of Little and Eonan’s share of the profits from this publication.

By statute, 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 3455, amended by Act No. 37, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 3455, Stat. Ann. 1942 Cum. Supp. § 7.108), it is the duty of the auditor general to designate a newspaper to publish these notices. Defendant La-van was the legal advisor to the then auditor general George Gundry and seems to have handled details as to the designation of such publisher. Defendant Levinson was a newspaper publisher in Oakland county, owning and operating the Farmington Enterprise at Farmington, Michigan.

During the summer of 1937, Levinson and two other Oakland county publishers, Charles S. Seed of the Rochester Clarion and James Little, who operated the Pontiac News along with his partner, Ben Eonan, were each making efforts to be designated as publisher of the delinquent tax sales notices ; or at least to secure a share in the prospective profits therefrom. On August 30,1937, Lavan called the three publishers to his office in Lansing and asked if they had reached an agreement. They had not, and he sent them to a nearby hotel to draw up one. They came back with one which he concluded was not legally binding. He thereupon prepared one which provided that, having been designated to *397 publish the notices by the auditor general, Seed agreed to engage the services of Levinson and Little and their papers to assist him and he would pay each of the men three-eighths of any profits therefrom. The designation and contract for publication were given to Seed on that same day. Despite the wording of the contract, it was agreed that each of the three should receive one-quarter and the other one-quarter was to be divided among four other newspapers in the county.

Since none of the three publishers had a printing plant capable of handling the printing job and since it was questionable even whether Little’s paper was qualified legally to publish the notices, the three parties selected a Livingston county printer to do the actual printing at a cost of $9,000. However, Seed’s paper did distribute the notices. The contract provided that Levinson and Little were to help finance the undertaking; but the parties seem to have had trouble raising the $9,000, and eventually this money was advanced by the State. "When the publication and distribution were completed, Charles S. Seed & Son, as publishers of the Rochester Clarion officially designated to publish the notices, were entitled to receive from the State approximately $43,000 less the sum of $9,000 which had been advanced. After deduction of other individual expenses, some $31,000 profit remained to be divided.

During the course of the publication, friction developed among the parties to the agreement to the point where they virtually “could not agree on anything.” It was finally decided that they would get Lavan to decide how much each of the parties was to receive and to have the State make out separate warrants representing each share, though all would have to be payable to the designated publisher, Seed. The figure finally decided on as representing a one- *398 quarter share of the profits was about $7,700. Seed ultimately received two State warrants totaling $10,005.64 from which he testified he paid his expenses amounting to $2,250;, leaving approximately $7,750 as his share. On April 13,. 1938, he received his first warrant in Lavan’s office and also indorsed one for $7,625 representing Levinson’s share and one for $7,600 which was to go to Little’s paper. Another warrant for $9,015.36, which does not seem to be involved in this suit, was indorsed by him at that time. The latter three warrants were left with Lavan, seemingly for distribution.

On the next day, April 14, 1938, Levinson appeared at a Lansing bank, after being introduced by Lavan over the telephone, and cashed his warrant for $7,625 and the one for $9,015.36. Both warrants had been made payable by the State to the Rochester Clarion and had been indorsed by Seed “The Rochester Clarion, C. S. Seed & Son, C. S. Seed.” The bank cashier, apparently believing Levinson was Seed, did not have Levinson indorse them. On April 21,1938, Levinson again appeared at this bank and cashed the $7,600 warrant which Lavan had told Seed was to go to Little. The next day Levinson purchased a cashier’s check from a Detroit bank for $5,000 payable to Little and his partner Ronan which Lavan gave to Little on April 25,1938, saying it was all Little would get and he “could take it or leave it.”

Meanwhile, Seed testified, Lavan had called him up April 14th, in regard to the Little payment, stating he felt Little was getting too much:

“A. On the 14th day of April, the day after I got my check — the first check — he called me up and says, ‘Charley, I don’t think that division we made yesterday was entirely satisfactory.’ He says, ‘I think you should have more, being the designated *399 paper.’ And then he asked me what I thought about Mr. Little’s getting $7,600. He said he thought $5,000 was a plenty, and he said that I would get the balance, what he took off from Mr. Little — gave me to understand that over the phone.
“ Q. You agreed that was all right?
“A. I did.”

Seed never got the $2,600 difference. It is the claim of the State that this money belonged to Little and Eonan, and that Levinson and Lavan converted it to their own uses. The State admits it must prove the $2,600 actually belonged to Little and Eonan in order to convict defendants of the charge in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.W.2d 721, 303 Mich. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lavan-mich-1942.