State v. Cadwell

44 N.W. 700, 79 Iowa 432, 1890 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 7, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 700 (State v. Cadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cadwell, 44 N.W. 700, 79 Iowa 432, 1890 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 85 (iowa 1890).

Opinion

Granger, J.

The defendants are indicted under chapter 153 of the Laws of the Eighteenth General Assembly, which provides “that no bank, banking house, exchange broker, deposit office, or firm, company, corporation or party engaged in banking, broker, exchange or deposit business shall accept or receive on deposit * * * any moneys, bank bills or notes, or United States treasury notes or currency, or other notes, bills or drafts circulating as money or currency, when such bank, or banking house, exchange broker or deposit office, firm or party is insolvent,” and that “if any such bank, banking house, exchange broker or deposit office, firm, company, corporation or party, shall receive, or accept on deposit, any such deposits, as aforesaid, when insolvent, any officer, director, cashier, manager, member, party or managing party thereof, knowing of such insolvency, who shall knowingly receive or accept * * * any such deposits as aforesaid, shall be guilty of a felony, and upon conviction shall be punished” as therein provided. The [435]*435indictment in this case was returned about November 10, 1888. For some years prior thereto, the defendants had owned and managed two banks, — one known as “ Cadwell’s Bank,” at Logan, and the other known as “ Boyer Yalley Bank,” at Woodbine, — both in Harrison county. The indictment charges that on the. seventeenth day of May, 1888, the defendants, as such bankers, were insolvent, and on that day they accepted and received from Mary E. Oliver, on deposit, one hundred and ten dollars. On the ninth day of October, 1888, the defendants, under the provisions of the statute, made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors, and Stephen King was made their assignee. The record presents a number of questions which we will consider in their order.

i. reatoufng:Ti¿fiot' proof:aud ageney. I. At the time the deposit in question was received, one John X. Aleck was cashier of defendants’ bank 'af Logan, and issued the certificate; and af the time neither of the defendants was present. The certificate, against the objection of the defendants, was admitted in evidence, and the ruling is made a ground of complaint here. A specific ground of complaint in argument is that the defendants were indicted for receiving the deposit, and it is not competent to show on the trial that the money was received by another than the defendants personally. We think no such rule has ever been held by - a court of last resort. On the contrary, a general and well-recognized rule is that, if a person does the act constituting the offense, through the agency of another, the act is his, and it is unnecessary to aver the agency in the indictment. It may be charged directly as his act, and proof that he did the act through the agency of another will sustain a conviction. Whart. Crim. Ev. [9 Ed.] secs. 102, 112 ; Whart. Crim. Law [9 Ed.] sec. 522 ; State v. Neal, 7 Fost. (N. H.) 131; Commonwealth v. Nichols, 10 Metc. 259; Commonwealth v. Bagley, 7 Pick. 279 ; Stoughton v. State, 2 Ohio St. 562; Brister v. State, 26 [436]*436Ala. 107. It is further said, in this connection, that the defendants are not charged with permitting or conniving at the receiving of the deposit, but with receiving it themselves, and that, under the averments of the indictment, the proofs as to Aleck’s receiving the money are not admissible. The rule above announced is conclusive of this question. The defendants are indicted as a firm of bankers, and as such they are charged with receiving the money; and it is entirely immaterial whether they received it in person, or through their cashier. In law, if they permitted him to do it for them., they did it themselves.

Our attention is directed to Code, section 4298, to the effect that the indictment must be direct and certain as to the particular circumstances of the offense charged, when necessary to constitute a complete offense. The indictment in this case charges that the defendants, as such bankers, did, at a certain time and place, being then insolvent, receive the deposit in question. That is certainly á statement of the facts constituting the offense, in ordinary and concise language, and in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended. Such alone is the requirement of the law. Code, sec. 4296. Under such averments, the state may prove that they received the deposits through the cashier of their bank.

g_. ll(Jepos_ it” defined. Another point urged as against the admission of the certificate of deposit in evidence is that on its face it is evidence of money loaned, instead of a deposit, that the indictment charges.the offense as receiving, and the law only makes it an offense to receive money on deposit. The certificate is as follows :

“$110. Cad well’s Bank, Logan, Ia., May 17, 1888.
“This certifies that Mrs. Mary E. Oliver has deposited in this bank one hundred and ten dollars, payable to the order of self, in current funds, on the return of this certificate properly indorsed. No. 2142.
“John X. Aleck, Cashier.”

[437]*437It is true the transaction is, in a certain sense, a loan of money, but not in a sense to distinguish it from the deposit contemplated in the law. In banking circles, deposits are often qualified or distinguished as “time” and “call” deposits. The former is for a specified time, and the latter is subject to call at the pleasure of the depositor. In fixing the charaeter of the transaction, we look to the intent of the act, making the' receipt of deposits by an insolvent bank a crime. In some measure, we judge of that intent by looking' to the evil to be remedied by it. It is a matter of common observation that deposits are made, in banks, upon an entirely different reliance as to security than in the investment of money as a “loan,” as the term is generally understood. Banks, in receiving deposits, offer no security, nor is security expected. The money is thus placed in a bank because of a confidence in its solvency and ability to repay, because óf the fact that it is a bank ; and this confidence continues, even in the face of the fact that it is so often misplaced. In the case of ordinary loans, the question of the solvency of the borrower, and the safety of the investment, is made a matter of prior investigation ; and in many sections of the country a pledge of property as security is generally required. In making these deposits with banks without security, people make no distinctions in the character of the deposits ; that is, whether they are “time” or “call” deposits. They are made with the same confidence in the solvency of the bank, and upon like terms as to security. The repeated instances in which this confidence has been betrayed, and depositors subjected to loss, led to the legislation referred to. Under the present law, no insolvent bank has the right to receive money on deposit. It is fair to presume that the legislature used the term “deposit” as it is ordinarily used in banking and commercial circles, and we see no reason for thinking the law designed a protection for the people against loss by one class of deposits, and not the other. The certificate designates the transaction [438]*438as a “deposit,” and we think it clearly within the purview of the legislative purpose.

-: insolvency: evidence. II. The deed of assignment was admitted in evidence, of which complaint is made.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 700, 79 Iowa 432, 1890 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cadwell-iowa-1890.