State v. Fischer

249 S.W. 46, 297 Mo. 164, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 23, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 46 (State v. Fischer) 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. Fischer, 249 S.W. 46, 297 Mo. 164, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 289 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*169 WHITE, J.

The appellant, on a trial in the Circuit Court of Laclede County, on the seventeenth day of May, 1922, was found guilty of embezzlement, and his punish* ment assessed at two years’ imprisonment in the State penitentiary.

The defendant was a traveling salesman for G. D. Milligan Grocer Company, of Springfield. About the eleventh day of February, 1922, the manager of the company, Fred Holt; charged the defendant with being short in his accounts, and Fischer admitted that he had collected money which he had not turned in.

It was proven that in January and February, 1922, Fieher had collected and retained money in Laclede County in excess of thirty-dollars for goods sold. It was also shown that he had received checks from purchasers in Laclede County for goods sold there; that such checks were payable to the Milligan Grocer Company; that defendant had cashed them in Laclede County and had failed to account for the money. This occurred with regard to several customers to whom he had sold goods. The amount of money received on checks which he cashed was considerably more than the amount which he had collected in cash. Officers of the Milligan Grocer Company testified that Fischer was authorized to collect amounts due on accounts, but was not authorized to cash ,checks which were delivered to him in payment of accounts. It was his duty to forward such checks to the house every day, and to account for the cash which he received every week.

The defendant had an arrangement with his employer for a bonus, which is explained by the witnesses for the State in this way: he was to receive fifty per cent of the gross profits on his sales, from which fifty per cent were to be deducted his salary and traveling expenses. He received a salary of one hundred and twenty-five dollars a month; if the salary and traveling expenses exceeded fifty per cent of the gross profits, then he would have no bonus. If they were less than fifty per cent of the gross *170 profits, then fie would have a bonus equal to tfie difference between bis salary and expenses and fifty per cent' of tfie gross profits.

Tfie defendant bases bis defense upon the arrangement for a bonus. He testified that the net profits were to be split forty-sixty; he was.to receive forty per cent of the net profits. That is to say: All salary and expenses were to be deducted from the gross profits, and tfien he was to receive forty per cent of what remained. He claimed that on that basis he received a bonus for 1919 of one thousand dollars. This was denied by tfie officers of the Milligan Grocer Company, who said the bonus for that year was a gratuity. The gross profit on the sales for tfie year 1921 was about sixty-three hundred dollars; tfie defendant’s salary and expenses were considerably more than half of that, so that according to the State’s witnesses there was no bonus to pay.

According to the theory of the defendant there would be a bonus, because after deducting his salary and expenses there was a net profit of which he was entitled to forty per cent and he had a right to retain the money which he had collected to apply on his bonus for 1921.

Tfie defendant made no concealment of his actions, but made a clear statement to the officers of the company of the different accounts which he had collected. On this evidence the jury found him guilty as stated, and he appealed from the judgment thereupon rendered.

I. Tfie appellant attacked the information by several motions which were overruled, and error is assigned to each of such rulings. For that reason we set out in full the information, which was filed tfie ninth day of May, 1922, as follows:

“Now comes J. H. Bowron, tfie duly elected, qualified and acting prosecuting attorney within-and for tfie County of Laclede, in th.e State of ¡Missouri, and under his oath of office as such prosecuting attorney and upon his hereto appended oath informs the court that one P. A. Fischer, known as ‘Pete’ Fischer, on or about tfie *171 7th day of February, 1922, aud on other dates within a period of three years prior to said 7th day of February, 1922, at and in the County of Laclede, in the State of Missouri, aforesaid, being then and there agent, clerk, servant and collector of the G. D. Milligan Grocer Company, a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of ¡Missouri; and he, the said P. A. Fischer, known as ‘Pete’ Fischer, not being then and there a person under the age of sixteen years, then and there by virtue of such employment and office of agent, clerk, servant and collector of the said G. D. Milligan Grocer Company, a corporation, as aforesaid, did have, receive and t^ke into his possession and under his care and control certain money, goods, rights in action, checks and personal property of the amount and value “of $380.45, the same being then and there lawful money of the United States, and which said money, goods, rights in action, checks and personal property was then and there of the value of $380.45, and the money, goods, rights in action, checks and personal property of the said G. D. Milligan Grocer Company, a corporation as aforesaid, the employer of him, the said P. A. Fischer, known as ‘Pete’ Fischer, the said money, goods, rights in action, checks and personal property then and there unlawfully, fraudulently and feloniously did embezzle and convert to his own use, without the assent of the said G. D. Milligan Grocer 'Company, a corporation, as aforesaid, the owner of said money, goods, rights in action, checks and personal property, with the unlawful, felonious and fraudulent intent then and there to deprive the owner, the said G. D. Milligan Grocer Company, a corporation, as aforesaid, of the use thereof; contrary to the statutes in such case made and provided and against the peace.and dignity of the State.”.

The defendant first filed a motion to quash the information on the ground that it charged the commission of more than one crime in one count&emdash;the embezzlement of money and the embezzlement of goods. The information is based upon Section 3327, Eevised g^a^eg ]9i9; wbich defendant correctly *172 says describes two offenses, but tbe two offenses mentioned in that section are not the taking of different kinds of property. One offense described is “secreting property with intent to embezzle,” and the other is the actual embezzlement. [State v. Stevens, 281 Mo. l. c. 644; State v. McWilliams, 267 Mo. l. c. 449.] The offense here charged is actual embezzlement, and the crime is a, single one, although it may consist of the embezzlement of several articles and of different kinds of property. That motion was properly overruled.

The defendant then filed a motion to require the State to elect upon which charge it would go to trial. This motion was based upon the same erroneous assumption that the information charged two offenses, whereas it charged only one.

II. The defendant then filed a motion asking the court to require tbe State to describe the goods; rights of action, checks and personal property mentioned in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 46, 297 Mo. 164, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fischer-mo-1923.