State v. Fabin

4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 288, 17 Ohio Dec. 49, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 76
CourtDefiance County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 25, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 288 (State v. Fabin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Defiance County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fabin, 4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 288, 17 Ohio Dec. 49, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 76 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Killits, J:

Two cases with the above title are before us for consideration on demurrer to the several indictments. The indictments cover the same ground and attempt to charge the same crime, the later having been returned in an attempt to correct the former. The ground of the demurrers is that the statutes of this state defining the crime of embezzlement do not include, in their descriptions of persons subject to prosecution, officers of the court, such as master commissioners and receivers.

The defendant was indicted in four counts, the first charging that at the time of the commission of the alleged offense he was ‘ ‘ an officer, to-wit, a special master commissioner, ’ ’ appointed by this court in a certain action then pending herein, describing it, and, after negativing the exceptions found in Section -6842, that by virtue of his said office and employment, and while discharging the duties thereof, he received and took into his possession certain money belonging to and which should have been distributed to the certain persons named in the indictment, which he fraudulently and unlawfully embezzled and converted to his own use. The second count is identical with the first, save that the defendant is therein described as “an officer, to-wit, a receiver appointed,” etc. The third and fourth counts follow the first and second in all essentials, save that the amount alleged to have been embezzled is another sum, belonging to and to have been. distributed to a different person.

[289]*289It is evident that an attempt has been made to plead an offense, under Section 6842, which, so far as is pertinent to the cases under consideration, and at the date of the alleged offense, reads as follows:

“An officer, attorney at law, agent, clerk, guardian, executor, administrator, trustee, assignee in insolvency, servant or employee of any person, except apprentices, etc., * * " whu embezzles, etc., * * * and an officer elected or appointed to an office of public trust or profit in this state, and an agent, clerk, servant or employee of such officer, etc., * * * who embezzles, etc., * * * is guilty of embezzlement.”

Apparently the pleader conceived the defendant, as receiver or master commissioner, to be an “officer” as that term is first used in the statute; the demurrer challenges the proposition that defendant, in such capacity, came within any of the foregoing descriptions of persons capable of embezzling, and our decision must turn on the construction of this statute, and .particularly of the words describing persons liable. At the outset we are met with the rule of strict construction. No person may be made subject to a criminal statute by implication, however his offense may appear to be within its reason. Only such transactions or persons are included in a criminal statute which are within both the spirit and the letter of the law, and all doubts of interpretation must be resolved in favor of the accused. Andrew v. U. S., 2 Story, 202; Hall v. State, 20 Ohio, 7; State v. Meyers, 56 O. S., 340.

As a necessary corollary to this rule, it is settled that there are no common law crimes in this state, and no act, however hurtful or immoral, is punishable as a crime in Ohio, unless the same is specifically embraced within the terms of some statute. Sutchiff v. State, 18 Ohio, 469; Mitchell v. State, 42 O. S., 383; Johnson v. State, 66 O. S., 59.

Turning now to the section, and its legislative history, always open for profitable consideration in constructing statutes, we find that the first embezzlement statute was passed in 1839 and read as follows:

‘ ‘ That if any clerk or servant of any private person or of any co-partnership, except apprentices and persons within the age of [290]*290eighteen years, or if any officer, agent, clerk, or servant of any incorporated company shall embezzle,” etc. (Swan, Statutes of 1841, page 239; 37 Ohio Laws, .page 74.)

This law did not have the last clause relating to embezzlements by public officers, their agents and servants, and it will be noticed that the word “officer” is limited exclusively to corporations.

The law was next amended in 1864 (61 Ohio Laws, 59) by adding the words “or joint stock company” after the words “incorporated company.” In other respects the law was left as it had existed for two decades. In 1869 (66 Ohio Laws, 29) it was amended by the insertion of the word “agent” after “clerk” in the first line, and by adding the clause relating to embezzlements by public officers.

In 1877 the criminal statutes of Ohio were revised (74 Ohio Laws, 240) under this title: “An act to amend, revise and consolidate the statutes relating to crimes and offenses, and to repeal certain acts therein named, to be known as title one, crimes and offenses, part four of the act to revise and consolidate the general statutes of Ohio.” The first section of this act provided that the words “person” and “another,” when used to designate the owner of any property the subject of an offense, should be held to include “not only natural persons, but every other owner of property.” (See Section 6794.) This provision made possible a consolidation of several embezzlement statutes, and accordingly, a comprehensive law appears on page 249 of the laws of that year, as follows:

“An officer, agent, clerk, servant, or employee of any person (except apprentices, and persons under the age of eighteen years) who embezzles, etc., * * * and an officer elected or appointed (to) an office of public trust or profit in this state, and an agent, clerk, servant or employee of such officer, or of a board of such officers who embezzles,” etc.

This revision and consolidation is seen to have consisted in rearranging and cutting down the number of words in the first part of the old main statute, made possible by the enlarged use of the term “person,” and, by adding the words “and an agent, clerk, servant or employee of such officer, or of a board of such officers,” in doing away altogether with several long sections [291]*291relating to embezzlements by appointees in the public institutions.

It is a mandate of construction of all revised statutes, and particularly those embraced in the revision provided for by the act of 1875 (72 Ohio Laws, 87) of which this embezzlement statute, as re-enacted in 1877, is one, that the same construction which the original statute received, or would have received had its interpretation been called for, should be applied to its enactment in its revised and consolidated form, although the language may have been changed, unless it is clear that by -changed language a change of substance was intended. Allen v. Russell, 39 O. S. 336, 337.

Applying the principle, it is plain that as to the first use of the word “officer” in the revised statute, there is no enlargement of the revised statute over the original, and that only the “officer” of a person, i. e., an artificial person, such as can become and is the owner of property (Section 6794)' is within its provisions. It is apparent that, applying this rule, and considering the element's out of which the revised, statute was created, that the word “person” can not include the court; that where it is seen from the facts in the case, not to mean a natural person, its application is limited to incorporated or joint stock companies. Judge Thurman, in Bloom v. Richards, 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 288, 17 Ohio Dec. 49, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fabin-ohctcompldefian-1906.