State v. Leahy

144 So. 138, 175 La. 659, 1932 La. LEXIS 1879
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 20, 1932
DocketNo. 31869.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 144 So. 138 (State v. Leahy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Leahy, 144 So. 138, 175 La. 659, 1932 La. LEXIS 1879 (La. 1932).

Opinions

LAND, J.

Defendant, as agent and employee of the ¡city of New Orleans, and while serving as the secretary of the commissioner of public finance of that city, is charged with the embezzlement of forty-six coupons of the Lafayette. Securities Company, Inc., of the value •of $1,495, intrusted to his keeping by his employer, the city of New Orleans.

Defendant was convicted of embezzlement and sentenced to serve not less than two nor more than four years at hard labor in the State Penitentiary and, on appeal, presents for the consideration of this court four bills of exception.

Bill No. 1.

Defendant was tried on March 31,1932. On that day, before the jury was impaneled, he filed a motion for a continuance for one week on the ground that he has had insufficient time to employ counsel and to allow his counsel to become familiar with all the facts of his case, which defendant averred was complicated and involved a number of records, documents, and witnesses who could not be easily reached.

In the per curiam to this bill, the trial judge states:

“Defendant’s motion for a continuance shows that he did, on March 22, 1932, receive a notice that his trial was fixed for the 31st day of March, 1932, which was nine days before the actual trial.
“The attorney for the defendant, Mr. Todd, stated that he was employed on March 23rd or 24th, which gave counsel seven or eight days in which to prepare a defense.
“This case was not ‘a complicated one involving a number of records, documents and witnesses who could not be easily reached.’ The defense was solely that' the defendant had received the coupons named in the Bill of Information from the Commissioner of Public Finance of the City of New Orleans, and that he laid them on his, the defendant’s desk, and that some one had stolen them.
“Therefore, it can readily be seen that no records or documents or witnesses were necessary to prove this, as the defendant could be and was the only witness that testified that the coupons had been stolen.”

The granting of a continuance rests largely within the discretion of the trial judge, and his refusal to grant a continuance should not be interfered with, except when it appears that he has abused the discretion vested in him, and no abuse of his discretion appears in the present case. State v. White, 156 La. 784, 101 So. 136; State v. Dwyer, 159 La. 399, 105 So. 410; State v. Williams, 162 La. 590, 110 So. 766; State v. Scruggs, 165 La. 842, 116 So. 206; State v. Taylor, 167 La. 1113, 120 So. 875.

Bill No. 2.

This bill reads as follows: .

“That on the trial of this cause on the 31st day of March, 1932, the State of Louisiana called as a witness one A. Miles Pratt, Commissioner of Finance of the City of New Orleans. That the witness testified in substance as follows:
*663 “He was Commissioner of Finance at the time the alleged embezzlement was committed by the defendant. The. defendant was acting as Secretary to the witness. On the 28th day of January, 1931, he went to the box in the bank vault with the defendant where the City’s trust funds were kept, and there clipped the bond coupons alleged to have been embezzled. These he turned over to the defendant with instructions to list them, transmit them to the City Treasurer and get a proper receipt.
“Several weeks later the defendant admitted to the witness that the coupons had been stolen on the day they had been entrusted to the defendant with the exception of two coupons which the defendant had cashed at that time without reporting; and that subsequently the stolen coupons had been returned in an anonymous letter. The defendant had further admitted at that time that he had mailed the other coupons, which had been so returned, out to the corporation which had issued them at Lafayette, La. That he mailed these coupons in a letter sent from Birmingham, Ala., to which he signed a fictitious name. That in this letter he asked that the proceeds be held pending further instructions. That he then sent a telegram from New Orleans signed with the.same fictitious name, asking that the proceeds be sent to him at New Orleans in care of the Western Union, identification waived.
“The witness stated positively that the defendant’s instructions were to transmit the coupons without delay to the City Treasurer.
“During the course of his examination, the witness was asked by counsel for the defense whether or not he felt any hostility toward the defendant, whereupon the witness answered:
“ ‘No sir, except that Mr. Leahy in my estimation violated my confidence. He was my confidential secretary and he didn’t do what he should have done. I was responsible for those coupons and if they had been cashed by Mr. Leahy or any one else 1 was responsible.’
“Thereupon the following further iwoceedings were had:
“By Counsel for Defendant: ‘Mr. Pratt, do you know or have you learned since 'this came up, or have you been told that Mr. Leahy furnished information to the District Attorney about the Trust Funds that provoked the investigation of your office?’
“By the Court: ‘That is clearly hearsay, I don’t think you have the right to ask Mr. Pratt what has been told.’
“By Counsel for Defendant: ‘The purpose is to show bias’
“By the Court: T think the question is whether he is hostile to the witness or not; what he has been told is hearsay evidence.’ ”

The per curiam to this bill states:

“The Court told Counsel for the Defendant that if Counsel for the Defendant wanted to show bias, prejudice or hostility on the part of the witness Mr. Pratt, towards the defendant, the Court would permit Mr. Pratt to be interrogated at full length on this point, and that Counsel for the Defendant could show, by legal evidence, any bias, prejudice or hostility which it was alleged Mr. Pratt entertained towards the defendant.
*665 “The question asked the witness shows, on its face, that the witness' was being asked about matters which were purely hearsay.
“The Court's ruling denied the defendant the right to interrogate the witness as to matters which were purely hearsay in character, but the Court at no time denied the defendant the right to show hostility, bias or prejudice, by legal evidence; the examination of Mr. Pratt will’show that Mr. Pratt was ■specifically asked whether or not he had any prejudice, hostility or bias against the defendant, and that Mr. Pratt answered in the ■negative.
“No attempt was made to contradict Mr. Pratt’s statement that he had no Has, hostility or prejxidice towards the defendant, hy evidence which would show, or tend to show, that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 138, 175 La. 659, 1932 La. LEXIS 1879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-leahy-la-1932.