State v. McDonald.

45 S.E. 582, 133 N.C. 680, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 582 (State v. McDonald.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McDonald., 45 S.E. 582, 133 N.C. 680, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 117 (N.C. 1903).

Opinion

WaliceR, J.

The defendant was indicted in the Court below for the crime of embezzlement and having been convicted appealed to this Court. It is alleged in the indictment that *681 be was the agent of the Supreme Lodge of Knights of Honor/ and that he did fraudulently, corruptly and feloniously embezzle and convert to his own use five hundred dollars, which had been received by him as agent and entrusted to his care for the said Lodge.

By consent of the State and the defendant certain facts were agreed upon for the purpose of being embodied in a special verdict. They were to the effect that defendant had been irregularly appointed Financial Reporter for .Oak .City Lodge in 1895, and assumed the duties of said office and acted as Reporter until June, 1901. Defendant collected all assessments from the members of the said Lodge and remitted them to the Grand Lodge until May, 1900. In Apnl~ 1900, he collected the assessments and deposited them to his individual credit in a bank in Raleigh and drew the money out for his personal use, the amount so drawn out being about twelve hundred dollars. He paid nothing to the Supreme Lodge after April, 1900. In July 1901, with money borrowed from another bank in the said city, he paid back to the members of Oak Oity Lodge the amount of the assessments collected by him. When asked why he did not send the assessments to the Supreme Lodge, the defendant replied that “he did not remit them because he got in a position that he could not do so.” There were other facts agreed upon and stated in the special verdict, but it is not necessary to set them out, as in the view we take of the case those already stated are sufficient to present the point upon which our decision must turn.

There was one disputed question submitted to the jury with the understanding that the finding thereon should be incorporated with the other facts, and that the facts so agreed upon and the said finding of the jury upon the issue submitted to them should constitute the special verdict. That disputed question was: Whether the defendant appropriated the *682 amount of the assessments collected by him with the intent to defraud the Supreme Lodge. The jury found that he did, and the Court being of opinion that upon the special verdict as thus rendered by the jury the defendant was guilty, the verdict was so entered and judgment rendered thereon, from which the appeal was taken.

Upon the question of intent the defendant requested the Court to give the following instructions: 1. That the felonious intent is an essential element of embezzlement and must ¡ be shown by the State beyond a, reasonable doubt, and unless fthe State has so shown the jury will find the defendant not . guilty. 2. That the intent with which the offense was com-jmitted is for the jury and not for the Court.

These instructions were refused, and the Court charged the jury “That there was an appropriation of the money by the defendant to his own use, and that the law raised the presumption, as a matter of fact, that it was done with a fraudulent intent and put the burden upon the defendant to rebut that presumption; that the defendant might have gone upon the witness stand and said he had no such intent, and then it would have been for the jury to say whether they believed the statement or not; but that the defendant had intro* duced no evidence and hence he had failed to rebut the presumption before mentioned, and if the jury believe the evidence they should answer yes to the issue.”

We think the Court erred in not giving the instructions asked by defendant, and also in charging the jury that the defendant had introduced no evidence and hence he had failed | to rebut the presumption of a fraudulent intent raised by the law from the act of conversion of the funds, and that if the jury believed the evidence they should answer the first issue “Yes.” It is admitted in the record that at the time the defendant agreed to the other facts in the special verdict his counsel stated that he did not waive the full benefit of the *683 prayers for instructions above mentioned, and that he would insist on all of his legal right as to the special issue submitted, and the rights of the defendant were accordingly reserved.

The crime of embezzlement is the fraudulent conversion of property by one who has lawfully acquired possession of it for the use and benefit of the owner. Embezzlement was not a common law offense. State v. Hill, 91 N. C., 561. It was first made a criminal offense in England by statute, 21 Henry VIII, ch. Y, to punish the appropriation by servants of the property of their masters in violation of the trust and confidence reposed in them. 1 McLain Or. Law, sec. 621. It was enacted in consequence of a decision that a banker’s clerk, who received money from a customer and appropriated it to his own use could not be convicted of larceny on the ground that the money had never been in the employer’s possession. Clark’s Or. Law, p. 308. It was made a crime in this State by The Code, sec. 1014. The general object of these statutes was to punish the misappropriation of property rightfully ini the possession of the alleged wrong-doer, who, though civilly liable for a conversion, could not be convicted of larceny, he-1 cause there was no taking from the owner’s possession by an act of trespass. The only difference, therefore, between larceny and embezzlement is that in the former there must be a i trespass, while in the latter that is not necessary. Embezzle- f ment is to all intents and purposes larceny without the ingredient of a trespass. In both offences the act of taking or con-15 verting must be done with a fraudulent or felonious intent, m! In embezzlement there must have been not only a relation of trust and confidence between the owner and the person who is charged with the conversion, but the property must have been appropriated with a fraudulent purpose. Clark’s Orimi-nal Law, secs. 99 and 100. We think, therefore, that the conversion of funds by a person who has been entrusted with *684 them becomes criminal as an embezzlement only by reason of this corrupt intent, and it is as necessary for the State to •establish the intent as a fact independent of the conversion as it is to prove the bad intent in a prosecution for larceny as a fact apart from the taking. The intent to defraud is no more implied in a case of embezzlement than the felonious intent is from the act of taking in a case of larceny. There is a perfect analogy between the two offences in all respects, except that in one of them a trespass, either actual or constructive, must have been committed, which is not required in the other, its place being supplied by the relation of trust and confidence between the parties; and as this difference has nothing to do with the question of intent, there is no good reason why proof of the intent in the one case should not be governed by the same principles as in the other, for where there is the same reason there is necessarily the same law. It follows, therefore, from what we have said that if the mere act of tak-ink will not raise the presumption of a felonious intent in a prosecution for larceny, there can be no> valid reason why the act of conversion should do so in the trial of an indictment for embezzlement. 3 Rice on Ev., sec. 458; 1 McLain Cr. Law, sec. 623; Underhill on Crim. Ev., sec. 282; State v.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 582, 133 N.C. 680, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcdonald-nc-1903.