State v. Foster

40 A. 939, 17 Del. 289, 1 Penne. 289, 1898 Del. LEXIS 23
CourtNew York Court of General Session of the Peace
DecidedMay 20, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 40 A. 939 (State v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of General Session of the Peace primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Foster, 40 A. 939, 17 Del. 289, 1 Penne. 289, 1898 Del. LEXIS 23 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Grubb, J:—

The Court are unanimously of the opinion that we cannot direct this jury to find a verdict- of not guilty at this stage of the case, and that you will therefore have to go on and present your defense to the jury. We will, of course, pass upon these questions involved in. this case when we come to charge the jury.

The defendant’s counsel excepted.

The Court charged the jury upon the various propositions of law raised by the prayers of the respective counsel, as follows:

Grubb, J.,

charging the jury:

Gentlemen of the jury: — Mahlon B. Foster stands charged in this indictment upon three counts—two only of which [293]*293the State relies upon. In the first count it' is charged that he received, as the agent of Mrs. Margaret H. Wells, money belonging to the said Margaret H. Wells, and afterwards, having it in his custody as her agent, unlawfully embezzled it.

In the second count the defendant is charged with obtaining the money of the prosecuting witness, Mrs. Margaret H. Wells, while acting as her agent, and with fraudulently and unlawfully misapplying this money, while still in his custody as her agent.

This indictment has been found under the statute of the State, entitled “An act concerning embezzlement and defalcation by corporate officers and others,” passed at Dover, March 28, 1879, the provisions of which, relating to this charge, are as follows: “That every cashier, servant, agent, or clerk to any person or to any body corporate, or being employed for the purpose, or in the capacity of a cashier, servant, agent or clerk by any person or body corporate, who shall embezzle, fraudulently abstract, or misapply any money, goods, bill, note, bond, check evidence of debt, or other valuable security, or effects, which, or any part whereof, shall be delivered to, or received, or taken into possession by him, or to which he has access for, or in the name, or on account of his master, or employer, although such money, goods, bill, note, bond, check, evidence of debt, or other valuable security, or effects, was not received into the possession of such master, or employer, otherwise than by the actual possession of his cashier, servant, agent, clerk or other person so employed, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall, on conviction thereof,” etc.

Under this indictment, the State contends that Margaret H. Wells, through Harry Ramsberger, created the defendant, Mahlon B. Foster, her agent, to receive from her her note payable to him and to collect that note for her and to pay the proceeds to her promptly—that is the contention of the State. And the State further contends that Mahlon B. Foster did receive that note from Mrs. Wells, through Ramsberger, that he, Foster, endorsed that note as the payee of it, and that he transferred that note to William H. Wickersham, who was a witness in this case, for a valuable consideration, which was mentioned to you; [294]*294and that Mahlon B. Foster, the defendant, actually received from Wickersham the proceeds of the note in the mode that was testified by Wickersham and others in the case. The State further contends (of course I am not' stating these as facts, but only the contentions, and it is for you to find whether or not what the State contends is true on all the evidence, as it will also be for you to find whether or not what the defense contends is true on all the evidence, being the ‘ ‘questions of fact in issue’ ’ under our new Constitution); I say the State further contends that although Mahlon B. Foster actually transferred, by his endorsement and delivery, the note of Mrs, Wells to Wicker-sham, and it passed entirely out of the control of Foster, and Wickersham gave him valuable consideration for it, partly in money and partly in the other ways that were stated to you from the stand, and that, notwithstanding the note passed out of the hands of Foster into the hands of Wickersham, and that he actually received the proceeds from it—money in part—yet that instead of conveying or delivering to Mrs. Wells the proceeds of that note which he actually received from Wickersham he fraudulently converted them to his own use; that he unlawfully embezzled them and unlawfully and fraudulently misapplied them. That is, instead of applying them to the use and for the benefit of Mrs. Wells he applied them to his own use and for his own benefit—a part, at least, of the money, if not all.

In support of the contention of the Attorney- General it is incumbent upon him, in behalf of the State, to show you, first, that Foster, the defendant, was created the agent of Mrs. Wells for the purpose contended for by the State. In order to prove that agency he must show you not only that the alleged principal gave the authority claimed, but also that the agent agreed to execute that authority and perform the duty; because no one can make an agent of another without the consent of the person who is to be the agent. It is for you, upon all the evidence, to determine, first whether Mrs. Wells, through Ramsberger, conveyed authority for the purpose claimed by the State; secondly, whether Foster was informed by either Ramsberger or Mrs. Wells of the purpose and of the authority which she desired, and [295]*295expected, to be conferred upon him; and if he did receive it, whether he accepted that authority or not, and undertook to discharge it—that is, whether he became not a general agent for her but a special agent for a particular transaction and did this particular thing and whatever was necessary to its accomplishment.

The counsel for the defense has claimed that an agency, for the purpose which the State claims, does not come within the meaning and operation of this statute against embezzlement, etc., which I have read to you. The learned counsel for the defense seems to consider that this statute applies to an agent in the more general sense and not to an agent for this particular kind of transaction and particular purpose, and that therefore we ought to say so to you and instruct you that such an agency is not within the meaning and operation of this law, and hence that you cannot find him guilty but should render a verdict of not guilty.

We are not able to say that you should find a verdict of not guilty on that ground of defense, because it is the opinion of this Court that one person may create another an agent to do a single thing for a particular purpose, and that such an agency is within the meaning, contemplation and operation of this act. Such an agency therefore being within the meaning and operation of this act, in our judgment, the question still remains, whether the agency for this particular purpose has been proven to your satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt. '

An agency may be proved in express language, written or oral, by direct evidence; or it may be proved by indirect evidence, that is, by what we call circumstantial evidence, the evidence of circumstances, such as the relations of the parties to each other, their language, actions, conduct and other circumstances in reference to the particular transaction in question, from which evidence of their relations, language, manner, conduct, acts, etc., you the jury may reasonably infer that an agency for the particular purpose claimed really existed, with the authority on the one side of the alleged principal and the assent on the other of the alleged agent.

[296]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 A. 939, 17 Del. 289, 1 Penne. 289, 1898 Del. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-foster-nygensess-1898.