State v. Chambers

249 P.2d 158, 70 Wyo. 283, 1952 Wyo. LEXIS 33
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1952
Docket2531
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 249 P.2d 158 (State v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Chambers, 249 P.2d 158, 70 Wyo. 283, 1952 Wyo. LEXIS 33 (Wyo. 1952).

Opinion

*287 OPINION

ILSLEY, Justice.

The defendant and appellant, Claude Chambers, was informed against, tried and convicted in the District Court of Goshen County, of the crime of embezzlement and was sentenced to a term in the penitentiary. He has appealed, alleging some twenty-six specifications of error, seeking a reversal of that judgment.

*288 The Information was filed under the provisions of Section 9-328 W.C.S. 1945, which provides: “Whoever being * * *, a trustee or other person acting in a fidur ciary capacity without good cause, fails or refuses when legally required by the proper person or authority, to account for or pay over to such person as may be lawfully entitled to receive the same, any money, choses in action, or other property which may have come into his hands by virtue of his office, duty or trust, shall be deemed guilty of embezzlement, and shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not more than five years.”

The Information charged the appellant Chambers with embezzling the proceeds of a check intrusted to him by one Le Roy Morgan to be deposited in the Citizens National Bank of Torrington, Wyoming, alleging that said check in the sum of $1,089.95 was a properly endorsed check issued by the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States to Le Roy Morgan, and that. “Claude Chambers then and there unlawfully, feloniously and fraudulently applied and converted to his own use, except for the sum of $200.00, with the felonious intent of then and there and thereby defrauding said Le Roy Morgan, and has wholly refused and failed to account to said Le Roy Morgan for the same or any part of the same except for said $200.00, though demand therefor has been made by Le Roy Morgan. * * *”

The appellant states in his 26th specification of error, “that the Information filed in said cause does not charge the defendant with a criminal offense.” A careful comparison of the Information with the essentials necessary to charge the crime of embezzlement under Sec. 9-328 W.C.S. 1945 discloses that all of the necessary allegations are set forth in the Information. The most that can be said of the argument presented by *289 appellant is that the Information is inartificially drawn. We are of the opinion that the Information is sufficient. 27 Am. Jur. 618 § 51.

On trial the jury returned the following verdict:

“Verdict No. 1
“We, the jury, duly empanelled and sworn to try the above entitled cause, do find the defendant guilty as charged.”

In specification No. 20 the appellant states that, “The Court erred in submitting Verdict No. 1 to the jury.”

Attention is called to the provisions of Sec. 10-1402 W.C.S. 1945.

“When the indictment charges an offense against the property of another by larceny, embezzlement or obtaining under false pretenses, the jury, on conviction, shall ascertain and declare in their verdict the value of the property stolen, embezzled or falsely obtained.”

The verdict of the jury did not comply with the requirement of the statute and fix the value of the property embezzled.

This is the fourth time that the provisions of Sec. 10-1402 W.C.S. 1945 have been before this court for discussion. In Thomson vs. State 21 Wyo. 196, 130 P. 850 and again in Merrill vs. State 22 Wyo. 186, 136 P. 795 it was held that it is mandatory for the jury to find the value of property stolen although horse stealing and the stealing of neat cattle is declared by statute to be a felony regardless of the value of the animal stolen. In the case of State vs. Le Masters 36 Wyo. 241, 254 P. 120 where the defendant was charged with receiving stolen property, this statute, requiring the jury to “ascertain and declare” in its verdict the value of the property involved, was again discussed and the *290 later case was distinguished from that of Thomson vs. State, supra, and Merrill vs. State, supra.

Judge Beard, commenting in Thomson vs. State, supra, upon the Ohio statute identical with our Sec. 10-1402 W.C.S. 1945, quoted with approval from Armstrong vs. State 21 Ohio St. 357, as follows:

“The determination of the grade of punishment is not, then, the only reason for this provision of the code. Although the value of the property stolen in one case, or falsely obtained in the other, may not affect the grade or kind of penalty imposed for these offenses, it may influence the degree of punishment to be inflicted. The statute gives a wide discretion to be adjudged, on conviction. In this view, it may have been regarded as material to the substantial rights of the defendant, that the actual value of the property stolen, or falsely obtained, should be ascertained and returned in the verdict, and that it should not be left, as on a general verdict of guilty, according to respectable authority it might be (Bish. Crim. Proc., Sec. 719), to be implied to be the amount stated in the indictment. But whatever reasons may have induced the enactment of the. section, its terms are such, we are constrained to hold, that the offense for which the defendant was tried, was embraced in its provisions. To hold the reverse would virtually be a judicial repeal of the section. The verdict was not, therefore, in accordance with the express requisition of the statute, and should have been set aside on the motion of the defendant made for that purpose. It follows that the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.” 21 Wyo. 202, 130 P. 850.

Judge Beard also referred to the Nebraska cases of Holmes vs. State 58 Neb. 297, 78 N.W. 641; McCoy vs. State 22 Neb. 418, 35 N.W. 202; Fisher vs. State 52 Neb. 531, 72 N.W. 954; McCormick vs. State 42 Neb. 866, 61 N.W. 99. All four of the Nebraska cases held that the provision of the Nebraska code (identical with 10-1402 W.C.S. 1945) fixing the value of the property to be returned in the verdict of the jury, was wholly *291 ignored although clearly applicable; that its provisions are mandatory and cannot be evaded; that the verdict conferred no authority upon the trial court to enter a judgment or sentence.

The Attorney General now contends that since the decision in Thomson vs. State, supra, and the decisions of the Supreme Courts of Ohio and Nebraska, both courts having overruled their previous decisions, there is no need now for this court to require a jury to find and declare value in its verdict where the degree of crime does not depend on value. Reference is made to Serra vs. State 14 Ohio App. Rep. 252 wherein the decision in Armstrong vs. State, supra, is expressly overruled, although the Ohio court in the Serra case seems to have some doubt as to its judgment in that regard. Referring to the Ohio statutes which had been changed since the decision in Armstrong vs. State, the Ohio court states:

“* * * but if we should be in error as to this there is another reason why the plaintiff in error in this case ought not to be heard to complain because the jury did not find the value of the automobile which the jury found him guilty of stealing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 P.2d 158, 70 Wyo. 283, 1952 Wyo. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chambers-wyo-1952.