State v. Hanlin

110 N.W. 162, 134 Iowa 493
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 N.W. 162 (State v. Hanlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hanlin, 110 N.W. 162, 134 Iowa 493 (iowa 1907).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

From January 1, 1901, to January 1, 1905, one E. S. Wells was the duly qualified and acting clerk of the district court of Lucas county, Iowa. During the same period the defendant herein served continuously as Mr. Wells’ deputy in said position, and as such received and paid out a large proportion of the moneys. of said of[495]*495fice, and had principal charge of its books of account. At the close of his term of service there were found, or claimed to be found, some discrepancies in the books or confusion in the accounts, indicating that numerous items of fees and fines received by the office and payable to Lucas county had not been properly credited to its account. Growing out of this alleged condition of affairs the defendant was indicted upon the charge of falsifying the accounts of the office. Before the cause came on for trial the county attorney, becoming convinced that the indictment was defective in failing to particularly state the specific acts of falsification charged against the defendant, moved the court on that ground to set aside the indictment and resubmit the matter to the grand jury. This motion was resisted by counsel for defense, and overruled. The defendant pleaded not guilty to the charge as made, but on trial to a jury he was convicted, and from a judgment requiring him to pay a fine of $100 and costs of prosecution he appeals to this court.

1. Indictment: mption resubmit: resistance: estoppel. It is argued that the indictment fails to charge any specific act of wrongdoing, and is therefore insufficient to warrant or uphold a conviction. We are of the opinion that the indictment was defective, and if the appellant was in a position to take advantage of , the defect we should have no hesitation in reversing the judgment against him. But, as we have already noted, when the insufficiency of the formal charge was discovered, and it was sought to send the case back to the grand jury in order that the matter in controversy might, be heard and disposed of upon its merits, the defendant by his counsel resisted the application and secured a ruling that the trial proceed upon the indictment as it stood. The same counsel now repudiate the ruling which they induced the court to make, and in support of the appeal insist that said application “ should have been sustained by the court upon its own motion.” It would seem unnecessary to say that a party cannot thus play fast and loose with the law [496]*496or with the court. An accused person is not always under obligation to point out fatal defects in the indictment against him, but may remain silent, and, if an adverse verdict is obtained, raise the question in arrest of judgment If, however, before entering upon the trial, the State discovers the defect and moves a resubmission for its correction and the defendant successfully resists the motion, his mouth is forever closed to insist that the court should not have taken him at his word. See cases cited in volume 2, Cyclopedia Pleading & Practice, 516, 517. That it is competent for the trial court to order the resubmission of a criminal charge to the grand jury where the indictment is clearly defective, see State v. Kimble, 104 Iowa, 19.

2. Public officers: falsification of accounts evidence: instruction. II. Exception is taken to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict of guilty. While the case as here presented is such that some members of the court would be better satisfied with a contrary result, yet . . J 7 " there is evidence fairly tending to establish ^ ° the claims of the prosecution, and, as the verdict 0f the jury has passed the scrutiny of the trial court, we do not feel at liberty to set it aside. It is made quite clear that in substantially all of the matters brought in question hy the charge against the appellant he made proper entry in the judgment, or combination docket kept in the clerk’s office, of the moneys collected and received by him in his official capacity. It appears, however, that the clerk or the appellant provided and made use of two other books, known as the cash book ” and “ distribution book,” into which the cash items were gathered or transferred from the dockets, and such portions of said items as indicated collections received which were payable to the county were segregated and entered in a separate column. When settlements were made between the clerk and the county, resort was had to these last mentioned books, instead of tracing the several items through the dockets, and the clerk from time to time paid over to the county treasurer the balances thus [497]*497shown, in his hands. It appears, however, that the transfer of the entries from the dockets to the cash book and distribution book was imperfectly done; some of the items being entirely omitted, and in some other instances the amounts entered in the cash book or distribution book were less than the amounts shown by the dockets from which they were taken. These items were mostly of somewhat trivial character, ranging from twenty-five cents to $15, but the aggregate at the close of appellant’s term of service was a matter of several hundred dollars.

Appellant is not charged with the embezzlement of any of these funds, nor is it urged in argument on part of the State that he in any manner profited by his alleged falsification of the hooks. Nor is proof of such fraudulent act or purpose essential to the State’s case. The charge against the appellant is laid under Code, section 4910, which makes the falsification of the books or accounts of the clerk’s office a misdemeanor. The act is forbidden without reference to the motive which prompts it, and if it be done willfully or intentionally, and that fact be sufficiently shown by the evidence, a conviction will be upheld, even though there be an entire failure of proof showing corrupt purpose or motive on part of the accused. Indeed, if fraudulent purpose be found to accompany the act forbidden by Code, section 4910, it will constitute the much greater offense of forgery under the provisions of section 4853. The fact that the latter offense is classed as a forgery and punished as a felony, while the former is classed as a misdemeanor only, would seem to indicate that the' primary purpose of the prohibition and penalty prescribed by section 4910 is to insure scrupulous care and attention in making and keeping the hooks of the office, rather than to punish fraud and corruption in the discharge of such duty.

The trial court instructed the jury that mere mistakes, discrepancies arising from mere oversight, forgetfulness, or incompetence in keeping the accounts of the office, would [498]*498not justify a conviction, and that defendant could be held liable in this proceeding for only such discrepancies and incorrect entries, if any, as were knowingly and intentionally made by him. This interpretation of the statute was as favorable to the appellant as he could rightfully expect. The verdict of the jury is therefore equivalent to a special finding that at least some of the omissions or incorrect entries made by him in the clerk’s books of account were not the product of mere mistake or inadvertence on his part.

3. Same Neither are we prepared to say that the fact that the books in the keeping of which these discrepancies appear were not books specifically prescribed .by the statute to be kept in the office will serve to prevent the application of the statute to punish their falsification.

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Bluebook (online)
110 N.W. 162, 134 Iowa 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hanlin-iowa-1907.