State v. Colson

30 S.W.2d 59, 325 Mo. 510, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 496
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 59 (State v. Colson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Colson, 30 S.W.2d 59, 325 Mo. 510, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 496 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

By an information filed in the Circuit Court of Chariton County, at Salisbury, on September 12, 1928, the defendant was charged with embezzling $54.50 of the funds of Missouri Township, one of the townships of Chariton County, while acting as trustee and ex officio treasurer of said township. The jury found him guilty and assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years. From the judgment and sentence entered on the verdict, he has perfected an appeal to this court.

The evidence adduced by the State is, in substance, as follows: Chariton County adopted the Township Organization Law more than twenty-five years ago, and has been subject to the provisions thereof ever since. From April, 1919, until May, 1924, the defendant was the duly elected, qualified and acting trustee andex officio treasurer of Missouri Township, in Chariton County, and, as such officer, had charge and custody of all of the funds of said township. These funds were received by the defendant from the township collector, the county collector and the county treasurer. He kept separate records of the township funds, school funds and road funds, but deposited them in a single account, in the Farmers Bank of Forest Green, in Chariton County, in the name of J.E. Colson, trustee. He filed annual settlements, covering his receipts and disbursements, every year except the last year of his service. The other members of the board of directors of the township "just took his figures" without ascertaining whether or not he actually had on hand the funds shown as balances in his annual settlements. In the latter part of May, 1926, he abandoned the duties of his office and left Chariton county, without notice to the other members of the township board or his bondsmen, and went to Kansas City, Missouri. A few days thereafter, he wrote letters to his bondsmen, in which he admitted that he had "failed" in the performance of his official duties, and that he was short "around $3000" in accounting for the funds of the township. In one of these letters, he said "it would be a good idy" to examine his books, for the purpose of determining the exact amount of his shortage, and also said: "I am not trying to doo you all nor am I trying to Beat you all for if you want me you can git me easy. But if you all will leave me alone so I can do something I do not expect to let you lose one dollar." In another one of these letters, he said that he had signed, and forwarded to his wife, a deed, covering the conveyance of a part of his farm to his bondsmen, which his wife would sign and deliver, *Page 515 in accordance with his arrangement with her, and also said: "This is all I can do un till the Glasgow Saving Bank is satisfied." The deed mentioned in this letter was signed and delivered to his bondsmen by his wife, but, later, the land so conveyed to them was sold at a foreclosure sale to satisfy encumbrances, and the bondsmen did not realize anything out of the sale of said land, nor out of the personal property of the defendant. Upon investigation, it was discovered that, at the time the defendant left Chariton County, there was no balance in the account of J.E. Colson, trustee, in the Farmers Bank of Forest Green, and no balance was found in any bank account of J.E. Colson, trustee, except "five dollars and some odd cents" in the Bank of Dalton. According to the defendant's books and the books of the township collector, the county collector, and the county treasurer, when the defendant left Chariton County, in May, 1926, he should have had on hand $1210.81 in the township fund, $2610.30 in the school fund, and $2074.79 in the road fund, or a total of $5895.90; and on April 16, 1924, he should have had on hand a total of $4685.94, but according to the ledger sheet of the Farmers Bank of Forest Green, there was a balance of only $1290.67 in the account of J.E. Colson, trustee, at that time. On April 12, 1924, the defendant gave to C.E. Chapman, a merchant in Keytesville, Missouri, a check of that date, for $54.50, payable to C.E. Chapman, drawn on the Farmers Bank of Forest Green, signed J.E. Colson, trustee, and written in the defendant's handwriting. Chapman deposited this check in the Farmers Bank of Keytesville, and it was paid by the Farmers Bank of Forest Green on April 16, 1924, out of the account of J.E. Colson, trustee. According to the testimony of Chapman, the defendant bought a set of harness from him in the spring of 1924, at the price of $52.50, and gave him a check for that amount, drawn on the Glasgow Savings Bank, which "wouldn't go;" and the defendant gave him the check for $54.50, drawn on the Farmers Bank of Forest Green, "to take up" the check for $52.50, drawn on the Glasgow Savings Bank, and the "protest fee" of $2. Missouri Township was never indebted to Chapman for harness or anything else, and the township board never ordered a warrant drawn in favor of Chapman, and the defendant was never authorized by the township board to pay Chapman any money out of the township funds. In November, 1926, when the defendant was arrested in Kansas City, Kansas, he told the Prosecuting Attorney of Chariton County that, during the summer and fall of 1926, he worked with threshing machines in Kansas, Nebraska, Minnesota, the Dakotas and Canada, and admitted that he was short about $3,000 in accounting for the funds received by him as trustee of Missouri Township.

Several of the State's witnesses testified, on cross-examination, that the defendant's reputation for honesty and integrity was good, *Page 516 prior to the commencement of this prosecution. And, in connection with the cross-examination of the State's witnesses, the defendant offered in evidence several exhibits, some of which were admitted and some excluded.

No evidence was offered by the defendant after the close of the State's case.

Other facts developed at the trial, and proceedings relating thereto, will be noted in the discussion of the questions presented for our consideration.

I. The defendant contends that he is charged with embezzling $54.50 of the funds of Missouri Township, and that the $54.50 in question was taken out of a bank account consisting ofVariance. school funds and road funds as well as township funds, and that, therefore, there is a variance between the charge and the proof.

Section 3334, Revised Statutes 1919, upon which the information is based says: "If any officer, appointed or elected by virtue of the Constitution of this State, or any law thereof, . . . shall convert to his own use, in any manner whatever, . . . any portion of the public moneys, or any moneys that may have come to him orthem by virtue of his office or official position, . . . every such officer . . . shall, upon conviction, be punished in the manner prescribed for stealing property of the kind or the value of the article so embezzled," etc. [Our italics.] It is charged in the information, among other essentials, that "the defendant J.E. Colson did unlawfully and feloniously convert to his own use moneys that came to him by virtue of his office as trustee aforesaid, to-wit, $54.50 lawful money of the United States and all of the property of the said Missouri Township, which said money came to and was collected by the said J.E. Colson by virtue of his official position aforesaid," etc. While it is alleged that the defendant embezzled $54.50 "of the property of the said Missouri Township," it is also alleged that the said $54.50 was a portion of the public moneys, that is, "moneys that came to him by virtue of his office as trustee" of said township.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 59, 325 Mo. 510, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-colson-mo-1930.