Riegle v. State

186 N.E. 876, 45 Ohio App. 251, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 460, 1933 Ohio App. LEXIS 490
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1933
DocketNo 263
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 876 (Riegle v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riegle v. State, 186 N.E. 876, 45 Ohio App. 251, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 460, 1933 Ohio App. LEXIS 490 (Ohio Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

The plaintiff in error, Franklin P. Riegle, was indicted in Wood county in May, 1932, charged with the violation of Section 710-172, General Code. On his application for a change of venue, the case was transferred to Sandusky county, and was there tried, resulting in his conviction and sentence.

The specific charge laid in the indictment is that Franklin P. Riegle, as president of the Commercial Bank Savings Company doing business under the laws of Ohio in the city of Bowling Green, on December 12, 1925, did unlawfully, fraudulently and wilfully, and with intent to defraud and injure said bank, misapply certain money, funds and credit of the bank in the amount and value of $1,000 and convert the same to his own benefit; that the amount of capital and surplus of said bank was $210,000, and that on said date the bank had invested in certain bonds of the Hughes Dairy Company more than 20 per cent of the paid in capital stock and surplus, all of which was known to said Riegle; that said bank was not, on that date, legally permitted to invest in any additional bonds of said company; that said Riegle, as president, did then knowingly and unlawfully purchase from himself on behalf of the bank a mortgage bond of the Hughes Dairy Company of the purported value of $1,000, *Page 254 notwithstanding said purchase exceeded 20 per cent. of the capital and surplus of said bank invested in bonds of the Hughes Dairy Company, and notwithstanding said bond had no market value, all of which was known to him, and that he did, on that date, knowingly, willfully and feloniously, with intent to defraud said bank and others, cause to be transferred and credited to his account in said bank the sum of $1,000 of the moneys of the bank, which proceeds were unlawfully and willfully misapplied by him for his own use and benefit.

The section of the statute cited, 710-172, is the penal section of the banking laws, but it is manifest that the language of the indictment relating to a claimed excessive investment in the bonds of the Hughes Dairy Company has reference to Section 710-121, General Code, which provides in substance that not more than 20 per cent. of the capital and surplus of a bank shall be invested in any one stock or security, but no penal clause is attached to the latter section.

A demurrer was filed to the indictment; the defendant contending that a violation of Section 710-121 was not a willful misapplication under the terms of the penal section, Section 710-172, General Code.

We have given the language of the indictment a careful examination, and conclude that the demurrer was properly overruled. The mere investment of more than 20 per cent. of the capital and surplus of the bank in any one stock or security would not, of course, constitute a penal offense, but the indictment charges far more than that. Such offense has, in fact, a double aspect, namely, the willful and unlawful purchase by himself, as president, of the $1,000 bond from himself for the bank, with the intent to defraud the bank, and, further, he is subject to the charge that, as president of the bank, knowing that 20 per cent. was unlawfully invested in the bonds of the Hughes Dairy Company, he unlawfully and willfully, and with intent to defraud, *Page 255 invested funds of the bank in the bonds of said company. The conduct which is condemned as criminal in Section 710-172, General Code, is not less criminal because it involves an investment of more than 20 per cent. of the bank's capital and surplus, as prohibited by Section 710-121, General Code.

The evidence discloses that the plaintiff in error, prior to the transaction of December 12, 1925, had been for many years a director and president of the bank, and had served as its attorney, and had for a long time been a director and attorney for the Hughes Dairy Company, and was undoubtedly familiar with the financial affairs of the bank and of the dairy company. He ceased to be president of the bank in August, 1926, and disposed of the stock which he had held. Some three or four years later the bank was taken over by the state superintendent of banks for liquidation. The dairy company was a customer of the bank, and had at various times been largely indebted to it.

Shortly before the date named the dairy company had arranged to float a new loan which involved taking up its existing bonded indebtedness and executing a mortgage and bonds in the amount of $125,000. The bank was the owner of bonds of the dairy company, and the plaintiff in error owned bonds of the same issue. The evidence shows that the bank on October 27, 1925, held bonds of the company of the face value of $6,000, and that the company was indebted to it on promissory notes in the amount of $35,000. On that date, by agreement with the dairy company, the bank cancelled its promissory notes against that company in the sum of $36,000, and accepted in payment thereof bonds of said company of the face value of $39,000. On the same day, $3,000 of bonds of that company, held by the bank, were withdrawn from the bank, but under what circumstances is not disclosed by the record, nor does the record show how much, if anything, the bank paid for $3,000 of bonds against the dairy *Page 256 company which it had obtained on October 26, 1925. On December 2d the bank became the owner of two more bonds of said company, each of $1,000 face value. No further changes occurred until December 12, 1925, and it would therefore appear that at the beginning of business on that date the bank was the owner of $44,000 face value of the bonds of the dairy company, and that these bonds had not cost the bank to exceed $41,000. On that date the plaintiff in error sold the bank one bond of the dairy company, of the face value of $1,000, for the price of $1,000, and the amount was deposited in his individual account in the bank and thereafter checked out by him. This transaction made the bank, at the close of business on that day, the owner of $45,000 face value of the bonds, but, before there could be a violation of the provisions of Section 710-121, General Code, it must appear that more than 20 per cent. of the capital and surplus of the bank was invested in these bonds, and the burden rested on the state to show that fact. While the bank in fact owned $45,000 face value of the bonds, yet as we read the record it had not invested more than $42,000 in acquiring them. The capital and surplus of the bank being at that time $210,000, it had not violated the terms of the section just cited by the fact of investing $42,000 in these bonds.

The indictment would have been just as good if no reference had been made in it to the claimed excessive investment of funds of the bank in the bonds of the dairy company, for there would still be left in the indictment the charge that the plaintiff in error, as president of the bank, knowingly and unlawfully purchased from himself on behalf of the bank a bond of the dairy company for $1,000, the same having no market value, with intent to defraud the bank. If the indictment had contained no other charge than that just mentioned, the evidence relating to the large purchases of bonds of the dairy company by the bank *Page 257 would have been competent as bearing on the intent of Riegle. In view of the state of the record showing that the bank had not invested any more than $42,000 in the bonds of the dairy company, the extended charge of the court with reference thereto must have been misleading to the jury.

Complaint is made about the charge of the court on the subject of intent. In charging on that subject the court used the following language:

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 876, 45 Ohio App. 251, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 460, 1933 Ohio App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riegle-v-state-ohioctapp-1933.