State v. Hattrem

13 P.2d 618, 140 Or. 371, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 60
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 618 (State v. Hattrem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hattrem, 13 P.2d 618, 140 Or. 371, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 60 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

The appellant was tried separately for the crime of larcency by embezzlement on a joint indictment charging that appellant and one W. E. Tyler, on February 14,1928, did then and there/‘knowingly and willfully and feloniously, embezzle and convert to their own use,” personal property consisting of money, checks, bonds and corporation stock belonging to the Municipal Reserve and Bond Company.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged, upon which judgment was entered. Appellant timely moved for a new trial which was overruled, and this appeal was taken.

*373 The appellant was president and the owner of the majority of the voting stock of the Municipal Reserve and Bond Company. This corporation was organized in March, 1923, for the purpose of dealing in stocks and bonds and selling its own securities. Its articles of incorporation, as well as its by-laws, were amended from time to time, changing its capital structure. At the time of the alleged embezzlement, it had outstanding many shares of Class “A” Common Stock of no par value; $100,000 of Class “B” Common Stock divided into 3,500 shares of the par value of $50 each, the owners of which had the exclusive voting right and therefore control of the corporation; $225,000 of preferred stock, divided into 2,250 shares of the par value of $100 each. Of the Class “B” voting stock, appellant owned 1,980 shares giving him absolute control of the corporation.

The company had secured a permit from the corporation commissioner to sell 4,000 shares of its Class “A” Common Stock at $75 per share, and 1,500 shares of its own preferred stock at $100 per share. It was also authorized to sell $4,250,000, face value, of its sinking fund installment bonds. These installment bonds were to be secured by certain securities deposited with a trust company, which securities were not to be impaired or removed from the custody of the trust company without the consent of the corporation commissioner or by deposit of an equal amount in cash. At the time of the alleged embezzlement, there had accrued on the installment bonds sold a liability of $48,538.

The method by which the alleged embezzlement was accomplished was as follows: Appellant had one W. Gr. Bohn appointed as a committee of one to pass on and examine all applications for loans from the corporation. Defendant, W. E. Tyler, who had negotiated for *374 and agreed to buy all the stock of the company owned by appellant, made application for a loan from the company of $100,000. The application was referred to W. Gr. Bohn, the loan committee, and by him approved. Tyler thereupon executed his individual note in favor of the company. Instead of the company loaning Tyler $100,000 in cash, it loaned something over $3,000 in cash, or all the cash that it had on hand, and bonds, mortgages and checks and other securities, amounting in all to $75,025 claimed to be all the liquid assets of the company, and a purported balance of $20,825 due to the company from appellant on his purchase of stock. These securities and cash were not received by Tyler, but were turned over to appellant who thereupon transferred his stock to his codefendant.

The evidence shows that appellant conceived the plan, as outlined above, to secure for his own use all the liquid assets of the corporation. He presented the plan to a number of persons who were, or at some time had been, connected with the company; to Thomas A. Crowe, a former secretary of the corporation; to J. ft. Armstrong, the then secretary; to Walter Johnson, a stock salesman; and to some others. None of these seemed sufficiently interested to take it up.

The testimony of Mr. Walter Johnson was that appellant approached him with a proposition of making a sale of the Municipal Reserve and Bond Company to him.

“Mr. Hattrem advised me that he was going to sell the company, that he had a buyer in sight, but did not divulge the name, he said that I knew the buyer whom it later developed that I did, and telling me that I being very intimately related with the company in many years of experience with the company would be the ideal man to purchase the company, knowing its operations and inner workings: I told him that I did not have any *375 money, nor would I be interested in the purchase of the company. He advised me that I did not need any money, and I don’t remember just what the exact words were, but he me that inasmuch as I was, — that if I would consider the purchase of the company, he would show me a method by which I could buy it, so I asked him to explain the method. And he asked me if my father was in the city and I said that he was, and he says. ‘You give me a note for consideration for $75,000, which by the way is $20,000 or $25,000 cheaper than I have offered it to this other man.’ The consideration was to be $75,000, and if I would give him a note, and have my father sign the note, he would show me a method where I could gain control of that institution * * * in explanation, he offered me the following: he advised me to come to the office and make application for a loan from the company in the sum of $75,-000. He would take the application for the loan to his loan committee, and he would see that the loan was approved. Then I could come back the following day with the $75,000 and he would have his controlling stock ready, which was all of the Class ‘B’ Common Stock, and he would hand me the controlling stock indorsed to me in consideration of the $75,000 in cash which amount of money I had previously borrowed from them on the previous day. I told him that I did’nt think such a transaction would be legal, and advised him that before I made any move of that kind I would seek the advice of my lawyer, * * * It was further explained that after I got the stock in my possession, I would need to wait three days and call my board of directors together and then I could go through the pouch, it was in my keeping, and I could go through the pouch and take out my $75,000 note and do as I pleased with it _ * * * I questioned the legality of the transaction with him, yes * * * there was no money on my part required at all, the money of the company was to be loaned to me, that is what represented the $75,000 * * * and handed back to him for the stock * * * I was to take the note out of the pouch and destroy it * * * I brought up that *376 subject (of putting up collateral security) and that is where my father’s signature was brought into the picture, I stated that my personal note was not worth $75,000 and my father’s signature was suggested,— Mr. Hattrem also knew that I had considerable worthless stocks and he said if I wanted to please myself, I could attach any amount of the stock that I had to the note to satisfy myself.”

On cross-examination, he was asked:

“Q. Now, Mr. Johnson, what was your father worth at that time?
“A. Twelve or fifteen thousand dollars.
“Q. Didn’t you make a statement to Mr. Hattrem, or did’nt Mr. Hattrem understand that your father was worth upwards of $100,000?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. You’re sure about that?
“A. Yes, sir.”

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 618, 140 Or. 371, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hattrem-or-1932.