Rast v. State

84 So. 683, 79 Fla. 772
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 10, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 84 So. 683 (Rast v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rast v. State, 84 So. 683, 79 Fla. 772 (Fla. 1920).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

The plaintiff in error was convicted in the Criminal Court of Record for Duval County upon an information charging him with the crime of embezzlement in three counts. He seeks here to reverse the judgment upon writ of error. „

[774]*774The information charged that Rast was Tax Collector for the County of Duval from November 1st, 1916, until September 8, 1918. There is a slight variation in these dates as alleged in the third count of which no further notice will be taken. The first count alleges that during that period he “did by virtue of his said office, receive and take into his possession certain monies, to-wit, twenty-seven thousand, seven hundred and ninety-eight dollars and twenty-five cents” on account of the State of Florida, “and after so receiving said monies as aforesaid” he embezzled and converted the same fraudulently to his own use on the last named date. The second count charges the embezzlement by him in the same manner on the same date of $110,589.75, the property of the County of Duval. The third count charges the embezzlement by him of $450.00, the property of the County of Duval.

The defendant moved for a bill of particulars as to each of the counts and that such bill should contain information as to whether the money alleged to have been received by the defendant was for license taxes, or poll taxes or taxes upon real or personal property, the names of the persons who paid the taxes, the date of payment, the amounts paid, the name of the person to whom paid, and the fund or funds to which the tax money so received should have been applied. The record shows that upon the day this application was made the.defendant pleaded to the information. His affidavit in support of the motion shows that the plea had been filed when the motion was made. The judge of the court made an order to the effect that in so far as a bill of particulars, which had been prepared and submitted, met the requirements of the motion the latter was granted; but denied in so far as the motion required information not con[775]*775tained in the bill. It was further ordered that the defendant and his counsel be “permitted to examine the public records and books from which the bill .of particulars lias been prepared and upon which the bill of particulars and- the allegations of the information are based provided, however, that such examination shall be made in the presence of a representative of the State of Florida designated by the County Solicitor of this court.” A copy of the bill of particulars filed was ordered to be delivered to the defendant.

The bill of particulars filed covered the tax rolls for the years 1916 and 1917. They showed in one item the total amount of collections on account of State taxes for the year 1916 and in one item the total collections on account of State taxes for the year 1917, and in many items for each year the payments made. According to the bill of particulars the payments on the roll for 1916 extended over a period from December 4, 1916, to September 7, 1918, and on the roll for 1917 the payments covered the period beginning November 7, 1917. For the year 1916 the deficit thus shown appeared to be $7,747.00, and for the year 1917, $20,051.25, making the total sum of $27,798.25 deficit on account of State tales upon the rolls for the two years, the amount charged in the first count of the information to have been embezzled of State funds.

As to the county monies alleged to have been embezzled the bill of particulars showed for ■ each year the total amount of collections on account of each fund and on separate sheets the amount of payments made by him, which upon the tax roll of 1916 covered a period from December 2nd, 1916, to August 19th, 1918, and' upon the tax roll of 1917 a period from November 5, 1917, to September 18, 1918. These deficits aggregated the total [776]*776amount charged in the second and third counts of the information. The amount alleged to have been embezzled, according to the third count, is $450.00, which, according to the bill of particulars, was the amount of the alleged deficit on account of poll taxes on the roll for 1917, but the bill did not confine these items to the third count. The record proper and the bill of exceptions show that a motion was made for a more specific bill of particulars, which motion was denied.

In the case of Thomas v. State, 74 Fla. 200, 76 South. Rep. 780; we said that the right of a defendant to demand a bill of particulars and of the court to direct one independent of express statutory authority may be considered as settled in this State. See also Thalheim v. State, 38 Fla. 169, 20 South. Rep. 938; Brass v. State 45 Fla. 1, 34 South. Rep. 307; Mathis v. State, 45 Fla. 46, 34 South. Rep. 287; Ellis v. State, 74 Fla. 215, 76 South. Rep. 698. It is unnecessary to repeat here the court’s reasoning by which it arrived at that conclusion. Mr. Justice LIDDON, in speaking for the court in the Thalheim case, quoted from the case of State v. Rowe, 43 Vt. 265, in which the court said: “That the rule was made with the view of satisfying the provision of the 10th Article of the Bill of Rights of our State Constitution, which gives the accused in all prosecutions for criminal offenses a right ‘to demand the cause and nature of his accusation.’ ” Any other view of the law, this court said, would be in conflict with that section of the Bill of Rights of our State Constitution. See Sec. 11 Bill of Rights.

In the Thalheim case the court approved the authorities which held that an indictment for embezzlement alleging the offense merely in a general way is one upon which [777]*777a bill of particulars should be furnished upon proper application by the defendant. In'that case the affidavit of the defendant filed in support of the application showed that the transactions between him and the corporation involved large amounts of money and that the accounts between the parties were complicated and intricate. The same conditions existed in the case at bar so far as the magnitude and intricacy of the transactions were concerned, but in this case the accusation against the defendant rested upon the public records and reports which were made by him or under his direction and supervision as was said in the case of Branch v. State, 76 Fla. 558, 80 South. Rep. 482, in which case it was said that it was “hardly conceivable that he (Branch) could have been misled or embarrassed in the preparation or the conduct of liis defense by the failure of the State to furnish him with information from public records which the law required him to make and preserve in the performance of his official duties.”

This statement is undoubtedly .accurate where the records are in the custody of the official charged with embezzlement or freely available to him for investigation. In this case, however, it appears from the order of the court that these records were in the custody of the court and the defendant and his counsel were permitted to examine them only upon certain conditions, namely, “in the presence of a representative of the State of Florida designated by the County Solicitor of this court.” The mere fact that the records “were kept by him or under his direction and supervision’’ obviously would not afford him the notice to which he is entitled unless he was at liberty to inspect them; for it is not at all likely that a person who occupied the position of Tax Collector of [778]

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Bluebook (online)
84 So. 683, 79 Fla. 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rast-v-state-fla-1920.