People v. Treadwell

10 P. 502, 69 Cal. 226, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 659
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1886
DocketNo. 20140
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 10 P. 502 (People v. Treadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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. Treadwell, 10 P. 502, 69 Cal. 226, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 659 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

McKee, J.

—The defendant in this action was convicted of embezzlement. He appeals from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The motion for a new trial was made upon the grounds that the verdict was against the evidence and contrary to law; and that the court, against the objections and exceptions of the defendant, erred in matters of law at the trial and in its instructions toc the jury.

As laid in the information, the charge is, that on the 12th of December, 1883, the defendant was “ agent and servant” of Charles Han eke; and in that capacity received from his principal, in trust for him, the sum of $2,102.60, lawful money of the United States, which, afterwards, on the 15th of August, 1884, in violation of his trust, he fraudulently and feloniously converted, appropriated, and embezzled.

Upon the first ground,—that the verdict was against evidence and contrary to law,—it is contended that there was no evidence establishing or tending to establish the allegation, as laid in the information, that the money charged to have been embezzled came into the hands of the defendant by virtue of his trust as the servant and agent of Haneke.

But admittedly, at the time of the transactions upon which the charge was founded, the defendant was a practicing attorney at law in the town of Woodland in Yolo County; and on the 12th of December, 1883, he received from Isaac Quinn $2,102.60 in payment of [228]*228a promissory note and mortgage, which Quinn had given to Carl Haneke as security for payment of the purchase-money due by him for a tract of land which he had beforehand purchased from Haneke; and upon receiving the money he gave Quinn a receipt for the same, worded as follows: —

“ $2,102.61. Woodland, Cal., Dec. 12, 1883.
“Deceived of Isaac Quinn twenty-one hundred and two dollars, to be applied in payment of his note of March 26, 1881, to Carl Haneke.
“ W. B. Treadwell.”

There is no question but that the money was received in payment of Quinn’s note to Haneke; and if the defendant received it as the agent of Haneke, he, as an attorney at law, must have known that the law imposed upon him the duty of paying it over immediately to the person for whom he received it. But the evidence, without conflict, shows that he failed to inform Haneke of the payment of the note, that he concealed from him the fact of its payment, that he kept the money, and, as he confessed, used it for his own purposes. Upon those facts, if they were all the facts in the case, the verdict of embezzlement would be fully warranted.

But it was and is insisted that, at the time the defendant received the money, he was not, in fact or law, acting as the “ agent and servant ” of Haneke, and did not receive the money for him; but that he received it for a Mrs. Wise, to whom the note upon which the money was paid belonged, and that she authorized him to keep the money for her.

The evidence showed that Mrs. Wise was the daughter of Haneke, and it tended to show that she had advanced to her father the greater portion of the money for which the note collected by the defendant was given, and that her father, at a time when he was sick and expected to die, indorsed the note to her, so that she might receive and receipt for the moneys which were payable upon it; [229]*229that she informed the defendant, as her father’s agent for the collection of the note, of the indorsement, and communicated with him in that capacity. Admittedly, it was also proved that Haneke had retained and employed the defendant in the year 1880 to collect the principal and interest of a note and mortgage upon a tract of land which had been sold to Quinn, the maker of the note; that the land at the time of the sale was subject to a trust deed in the nature of a mortgage, to secure an indebtedness due by a former owner of the land to the Sacramento Bank; that Quinn bought and entered upon the land as purchaser, subject to the trust deed; and that, while his note and mortgage were in the hands of defendant for collection, Quinn was unable to pay his own note or the indebtedness to the bank, and the bank was about to sell the land under its trust deed, unless payment of its demand was forthcoming. In that condition, Haneke, upon the advice and by the services of his attorney,—the defendant, — redeemed the land by paying the bank its demand. The bank reconveyed the land to him, and Quinn, by agreement with him, substituted for his note and mortgage a new note and mortgage trust deed, covering the principal sum of his old note, and the amount of money which Haneke had paid for redemption. This substituted note was as follows:—

“$2,450. Woodland, Yolo Co., Cal.,
“ March 26, 1881.
“ Three years after date, for value received,-1 promise to pay to the order of Carl Haneke, at the Bank of California, in the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, the sum of $2,450, in gold coin of the United States of America, with interest thereon in like gold coin at the rate of one per cent per month from date until paid. Interest to be paid every three months, and if not so paid, to be added to and become a part of the principal and draw like interest. And in case said interest be not paid [230]*230every three months, this note to be collectible at the option of the holder.”

The new note and trust deed were delivered, and after the latter was recorded the old mortgage was released and returned to Quinn, but Haneke retained possession of the old note until Quinn paid a balance of interest due upon it, which was not carried into the new note.

■ The redemption by Haneke and the novation by Quinn -were brought about by the services of the defendant; he draughted and supervised the execution and delivery of all the papers required to clothe the transaction with the forms of. law. For those services Haneke paid him on the day the transactions were closed, and that payment, it is insisted, ended the defendant’s agency, or, as he expresses it in his testimony, given as a witness in his own behalf, “ My employment ceased on the day when the deed of trust was drawn, and it was so stated at the time to the parties.”

No doubt, when a person is employed to render special services as agent for another, that his agency ceases with performance of the services and payment of compensation therefor. (Sec. 2355, Civ. Code.) Between such persons there exists no longer the relation of principal and agent, unless there is an express understanding between them, or it may be implied from their subsequent acts and conduct thal the person who acted in the.original transactions upon the retainer and employment of the other continued to act in the same capacity in other matters arising out of the original transactions.

Whether the defendant continued to act for Haneke after payment for his past services, in collecting for him the interest and principal of the new note, was therefore a question for the jury. Upon that question there was a conflict of evidence. The jury found against the defendant, and there was abundant evidence to sustain the verdict. For it was proved that both the. old and the new notes of Quinn were left by Haneke in the hands of [231]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 P. 502, 69 Cal. 226, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-treadwell-cal-1886.