State v. Gould

46 S.W.2d 886, 329 Mo. 828, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 774
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 886 (State v. Gould) 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. Gould, 46 S.W.2d 886, 329 Mo. 828, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 774 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

On May 9, 1930, the defendant, George A. Gould, and his son, Jay M. Gould, were jointly charged, in an indictment returned by the grand jurors of Jackson County, Missouri, with the crime of embezzlement as agents. The indictment was drawn under Section 4079, Revised Statutes 1929. Defendant, George A. Gould, was granted a severance. A trial of the case resulted in a conviction of defendant. The punishment assessed was four years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. A motion for a new trial was timely filed. The court overruled this motion and sentenced the defendant in accordance with the verdict. An appeal was taken to this court.

The facts, as revealed by the evidence, are about as follows:

George A. Gould was the owner of a real estate, loan and insurance business at Independence, Missouri, under the name of George A. Gould Company. Jay M. Gould, a son and the co-indictee in this case, was the bookkeeper and prepared the deeds, notes, deeds of trust and other papers necessary for the transaction of the real estate and loan business. Jay M. Gould had a license to practice law, and in that capacity examined abstracts of title, when it became necessary in any of the company's business deals. A daughter of George A. Gould performed the stenographic work, and a son, Roy H. Gould, had charge of the insurance business. The company enjoyed the confidence of the public. The business transacted netted an income of approximately ten to twelve thousand dollars annually. The business was owned solely by the father, George A. Gould, from whom the children received stipulated salaries. The defendant, George A. Gould, had a private office. His main duties consisted of the outside work; such as soliciting business and showing prospective customers property the company had for sale or on which they desired to negotiate loans. A part of the company's business consisted of negotiating loans on real estate and of investing their clients' money in real estate securities. The business transaction that resulted in the present charge had its origin in March, 1927. Cora B. Smith, wife of George A. Smith, at the suggestion of a friend, went to the defendant's office for the purpose of investing eleven hundred dollars in real estate securities. The defendant obtained a note for the Smiths, secured by a deed of trust on real estate, signed by Fred A. Rice, for eleven hundred dollars and delivered it to Cora B. Smith in exchange for a draft of like amount. The interest on this investment was paid to the Smiths semi-annually, by the Gould *Page 832 company. In December, 1928, the Rice property, on which the Smiths held a deed of trust to secure the eleven-hundred-dollar note, was sold by the Gould company for cash. The Smiths were notified, by the Gould company, that the property had been sold and that they held the eleven hundred dollars for them. In response to this notice, Cora B. Smith went to the office of the company and called on the defendant, George A. Gould. The defendant informed her that they had collected the eleven hundred dollars and at the same time suggested that he had some good property on which he could loan this money. Defendant showed Mrs. Smith various properties. In particular a house and lot owned by defendant's son, Max Gould. Defendant represented to Mrs. Smith that his son Max desired to borrow fifteen hundred dollars on this property, and that if she could obtain an additional four hundred dollars he could invest the fifteen hundred dollars in this property; that she would obtain a first deed of trust and note, signed by Max Gould and his wife. Mrs. Smith stated to the defendant that she would talk the matter over with her husband and if he agreed she would return with the additional four hundred dollars and make the investment. Mrs. Smith returned with a draft for four hundred dollars and delivered it to the defendant, George A. Gould. In return for this she received a note, purporting to have been signed by Max Gould and his wife. At the suggestion of defendant, the deed of trust and abstract were retained by the Gould company. Only the note was delivered to the Smiths.

In April, 1930, the Smiths learned that all was not well with the Gould company. Becoming alarmed over their investment, Mrs. Smith went to Independence, and, in company with an attorney, examined the records in the Recorder's office and found that the purported deed of trust, securing their note, had not been recorded. The facts disclosed at the trial, with reference to this, are as follows:

Max Gould owned the house and lot, which was pointed out to Mrs. Smith, by the defendant, as the property on which the Smiths were to have a first deed of trust. The correct description of this property was lot 76, Forbis Park, an addition to the city of Independence, Missouri. Jay M. Gould owned lot 75, Forbis Park Addition. This was an unimproved vacant lot. In the year 1922, the defendant, George A. Gould, secured for his son Max Gould, a loan of fifteen hundred dollars. Max Gould signed a note and a deed of trust conveying lot 76, above mentioned, as security for this loan. George A. Gould was the notary who took the acknowledgment to this deed of trust, and he testified that he handled the entire transaction. On May 29, 1929, five months after the deal with the Smiths was closed, the defendant, George A. Gould, negotiated a loan of eight hundred dollars for Max Gould. These eight hundred dollars were also secured by a deed of trust on lot 76, above mentioned. The deed of trust contained the following recitation: *Page 833

"This deed of trust made subject to one first deed of trust for $1500.00 dated May 1, 1922, due five years after date, bearing interest at the rate of 6% per annum."

George A Gould, as notary, took his son's acknowledgment to this deed of trust and testified that he personally negotiated this loan. The note which the Smiths received was secured by an unrecorded deed of trust, covering lot 75, found in the vault of Gould Company shortly after this trouble arose. The name of Max Gould and his wife, Lavetta Gould, had been forged to the note and deed of trust, leaving the Smiths without any valid paper securing their investment. Jay M. Gould, as above stated, owned lot 75.

Thus far the facts are practically undisputed. Cora B. Smith testified that all of her dealings with reference to the investment of the fifteen hundred dollars were with the defendant, George A. Gould. The defendant, on the other hand, testified that he handled the transaction up to the point where Mrs. Smith stated she had consulted her husband and that they, the Smiths, were going to invest their money in the Max Gould property, as suggested by the defendant; that then he, the defendant, turned the matter over to his son, Jay M. Gould, with instructions to complete the transaction as agreed upon, that is, to deliver to the Smiths a note and deed of trust, signed by Max Gould and his wife, covering lot 76, for fifteen hundred dollars and to pay off and satisfy of record the prior deed of trust for fifteen hundred dollars, dated May, 1922. This indebtedness, according to defendant, was past due and the holder of the note desired it to be paid. Defendant further testified that he did not learn that these instructions were not carried out until after his son absconded, and Cora B. Smith, in company with her attorney, came to his office, presented the note and informed him that the deed of trust had not been recorded.

The principal contention, made by defendant in his motion for a new trial and in his elaborate brief, filed by defendant's counsel, is, that the evidence does not sustain a conviction of embezzlement by agent as defined in Section 4079, Revised Statutes 1929.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 886, 329 Mo. 828, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gould-mo-1932.