State v. Sanford

297 S.W. 73, 317 Mo. 865, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 617
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 13, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 73 (State v. Sanford) 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. Sanford, 297 S.W. 73, 317 Mo. 865, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 617 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*870 BLAIR, J. Appellant

Appellant was convicted upon the second count of an indictment which charged him with assenting to the reception of a deposit of one hundred dollars in the Holland Banking Company, a banking institution doing business at Springfield, in Green County, knowing that said bank was at the time insolvent and in failing cir- cumstances. The venue

was changed to Benton County, where trial .was had. The jury found appellant guilty as charged in the second count of the indictment and assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of four years. Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were ruled adversely to the appellant, and he ap- pealed to this court from the judgment entered on the verdict. It will

not be necessary to state the facts at length because counsel for appellant concede that a ease was made for the jury. On January 15, 1924, pursuant to resolution of its board of directors and in re- sponse to a request made by appellant, the assets of the Holland Bank- ing Company were taken over by C. E. Bushnell, a bank examiner of the Department of Finance of this State. On January 11, 1924, or four days before the bank was closed, Mrs. J. A. Riley deposited one hundred dollars in said bank. It is admitted that appellant assented to the acceptance of such deposit. It is also conceded that there was substantial evidence tending to show that the bank was in failing circumstances at the time said deposit was accepted. The failure of said bank constituted prima-facie evidence of knowledge on the part of appellant that the bank, of which lie was president, was insolvent or in failing circumstances when said deposit was accepted. [Sec. 3365, R. S. 1919.] There was also substantial evidence tending to prove actual knowledge of that fact on the part of appellant at and prior to the time such deposit was received. Thus a case for the jury was made out under said Section 3365. tendered, and

first assignment of error is that the record does not die- (~1ose that the Greene County Criminal Court was organized, that the grand jury was iinpanelled or that the indictment was returned Curing Defective Oonsideration of the merits of this assign- mont is rendered unnecessary, for the reason that, since the cause was submitted here, the clerk of said court court has we have given leave to the filing of, a supplemental transcript of the record by which all of such facts are properly shown. I. The

*871 .IL. Appellant contends that the indictment does not state facts sufficient to constitute an offense. This assignment is based upon the contention, first, that the indictment fails to allege that the deposit was in fact received by the bank, and second, that the indictment fails to allege that the bank was in fact insolvent or in failing circumstances at the time the deposit was received. The second count of the indictment was as follows:

“And the grand jurors aforesaid, empanelled, sworn and charged as aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid do further present and charge that the said E. L. Sanford on the 11th day of January, 1924, at the County of Greene and State of Missouri, being then and there president of Holland Banking Company, a corporation, duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Missouri, the same being’ then and there a banking institution doing business in the city of Springfield, county and state aforesaid, a certain deposit of money, to-Avit: One hundred dollars lawful money of the United States of the value of one hundred dollars, the money and property of Mrs. J. A. Riley, did then and there unlawfully and feloniously assent to the reception of said one hundred dollars from the said Mrs. J. A. Riley in said Holland Banking Company, after he, the said E. L. Sanford, had knowledge of the fact and ivell knew that the said Holland-Banking-Company AAras then and there insolvent and in failing circumstances, and so the said E. L. Sanford, the money aforesaid, toAvit: One hundred dollars, lawful money of the United States of the value of one hundred dollars, the money and property of the said Mrs. J. A. Riley, in the matter and form aforesaid, did then and there unlaAA'fully and feloniously steal, take and carry away, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State. ”

The allegation respecting the reception of said deposit with the assent of appellant is rather awkwardly Avorded, but substantially conforms to the language used in Section 3365, Revised Statutes 1919. That section denounces tAvo offenses. One is the reception of the deposit personally by the officer of the bank and the other offense is for the officer to ‘ ‘ assent to the reception of any deposit . . . after he shall [have] had knowledge of the fact that such banking institution ... is insolvent or in failing circumstances.” Both of the allegations in the indictment, criticised as insufficient, are substantially in the language of the statute. Of course, the jury must find as a fact that a deposit of thirty dollars or more was actually accepted and that the bank was insolvent or in failing circumstances at that time. The jury could not truthfully find the facts charged in the indictment without finding that the bank was insolvent or in failing circumstances and that a deposit was in fact accepted.

*872 Indictment in ail respe,ets substantially the same as the indictment before us were approved in State v. Buck, 108 Mo. 622, and State v. Buck, 120 Mo. 479. In the first Buck case it was specifically urged that the indictment, which was similar in this respect to the one now before us, did not charge “that defendants as owners of the bank were previously insolvent or in failing circumstances.” "While Judge Macfarlane did not discuss this particular objection to the indictment, he held that it was good in all respects. That general ruling constituted a disallowance of the criticism to which we have referred. See also the information approved in State v. Lively, 311 Mo. 414.

Appellant cites Fleming v. State (Tex.), 139 S. W. 598; State v. Hubbard, 170 Mo. 346; State v. Phelan, 159 Mo. 122. In the Fleming case from Texas the prosecution was based on a statute identical with our Section 3365 in the particulars with which we are here concerned. The indictment was held bad because it “did not allege affirmatively that the bank was insolvent at the time of the reception of the deposit.” The defect found was as to time of the insolvency and not as to the sufficiency of the form of the allegation of insolven-cj’\ We "are not impressed with the soundness of this part of the opinion in the Fleming case and do not regard it as presuasive upon the point, especially as one of the three judges of the Criminal Court of Appeals of Texas inclined “to the opinion that the indictment is sufficient. ”

State v. Hubbard was a prosecution for obtaining a loan under false pretenses. An allegation that Liggett “was induced by the false pretenses to loan the said Walter Hubbard” the money in question was held to be insufficient on the ground that the indictment should have charged that Liggett did make the loan. The fact that the indictment before us is in the language of the statute sufficiently distinguishes the Hubbard case from the case at bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 73, 317 Mo. 865, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanford-mo-1927.