State v. Schofield

159 A. 285, 114 Conn. 456, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 159 A. 285 (State v. Schofield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Schofield, 159 A. 285, 114 Conn. 456, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 49 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Haines, J.

Both counts upon which the defendant was convicted rest upon the provisions of General Statutes, § 6517, Rev. 1918,. now § 6365, Rev. 1930, the applicable portions thereof being that “any . . . broker or any agent . . . who shall take, purloin, secrete; or in any way appropriate to his own use . . . any of the moneys, choses in action or property in his care or custody as such . . . broker, agent ... or any moneys received by him for the sale of such . . . choses in action or property ... with intent to defraud another . . . shall be fined. . . .”

The specific offense charged in the first count is that on or about November 19th, 1929, the defendant “being then and there a stockbroker and agent of Doctor L. L. Weinberg . . . did then and there unlawfully and wrongfully sell one hundred shares of New York Title and Mortgage Company, which said stock had been deposited with said Schofield as such broker and agent as security for balance due said broker and agent from said Doctor L. L. Weinberg . . . and re *458 ceived therefor the sum of $4,000, and did then and there unlawfully and wrongfully take, secrete and appropriate said sum of $4,000 and said one hundred shares of stock ... so held by said Schofield as security, to his own use, with intent then and there to defraud him, the said Doctor L. L. Weinberg,” and in the second count, that about October 15th, 1929, the defendant “acting in the capacity of agent and broker, received an order from William Brown . . . directing him as such broker to purchase two hundred shares of Railroad Shares Corporation . . . for . . . $2,462.50. Said Schofield as such broker received said sum from said Brown but failed and neglected to fill the order and deliver to said Brown said two hundred shares . . . but converted and appropriated said sum of $2,462.50, lawful money of the United States to his own use, with intent to defraud said William Brown.”

The State’s evidence under the first count was confined to a certain specified certificate C-1198 for one hundred shares of the stock of the New York Title and Mortgage Company alleged to belong to L. L. Weinberg and the proceeds thereof, and the second count to a sum of $2462.50, lawful money of the United States, alleged to belong to William Brown, as being the subjects of embezzlement. Under this statute the essentials of proof are four in number: (1) agency of the defendant, (2) the receipt of the stock and the money, (3) the conversion or appropriation thereof to his own use, and (4) his felonious intent to defraud Weinberg and Brown. State v. Henderson, 102 Conn. 658, 660, 129 Atl. 724. The evidence necessary for a conviction under this statute must satisfy the trier beyond a reasonable doubt of the truth of the specific charges made in the information. If there be reasonably deducible from the evidence any conclusion consistent with innocence, the requisite proof of the crime *459 must fail. State v. Guilfoyle, 109 Conn. 124, 139, 145 Atl. 761.

The numerous assignments of error are predicated upon denials of requested changes in the finding, upon certain conclusions reached by the trial court, and the overruling of certain claims of law made by the defendant. The last two assignments are identical in character and language, each having reference to one of the two counts in the information. They challenge the decision of the trial court “that the evidence was sufficient to establish and did establish and prove the defendant’s guilt . . . beyond a reasonable doubt.”

Where a question of this character is to be passed upon in a case tried to a jury, the accused moves the trial court to set aside the verdict and assigns the denial of this motion as a ground of appeal. Where, as now permitted by legislative enactment, an accused elects to be tried by the court rather than by a jury, the same right to challenge the legal sufficiency of the entire evidence is accorded, him by simply assigning this as a reason of appeal. State v. Frost, 105 Conn. 326, 331, 332, 135 Atl. 446.

The comprehensive character of these two grounds of appeal is such that an adequate consideration of them with the entire evidence before us will render a detailed treatment of the particular claims for changes in the finding unnecessary. State v. Guilfoyle, supra, p. 139; State v. Frost, supra, pp. 332, 333. The evidence submitted was considerable in volume and some of it complicated and technical in character. A careful study of all of it, however, discloses surprisingly few contradictions upon the essential subordinate facts. The oral evidence and the written records and papers in evidence, show that in 1929 and on the dates mentioned in the information, the defendant in his own name and as J. S. Schofield & Co., with offices *460 at Waterbury, was conducting a business commonly, though perhaps not with strict legal accuracy, known as that of an investment broker. The entire charge and control of the office details and of the books and records was in the hands of an office manager; there were two or three stenographers and clerks and a considerable number of outside salesmen, at one time sixteen, actively engaged in the sale of securities being marketed by the defendant. Up to the time of the general financial crash in the fall of that year, the defendant was carrying on a business of considerable magnitude. Some time between November 11th and 14th the banking department of the State took possession of the defendant’s office, books and papers, and on November 21st the bank commissioner obtained an injunction forbidding the defendant from the further prosecution of his business in this State. Late in November, the defendant filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy.

Among the many securities handled by the defendant were two stock issues, the shares of the New York Title and Mortgage Company and those of the Railroad Shares Corporation. The placing of the former was being directed by a New York concern known as the Investors Bankstocks Corporation, of which corporation the defendant was a direct representative in Waterbury and vicinity. The defendant’s offices were directly connected by wire with the New York corporation offices, a Teletype machine being used for frequent communication. The stock was forwarded from the New York office to the office of the defendant from time to time as requested by the defendant and was sold by him and his salesmen at a figure fixed by the Investors Bankstocks Corporation, and without payment by the individual buyer of a commission or other *461 profit to the defendant. We shall later consider the handling of the Railroad Shares Corporation stock.

To the time his business was closed up by the injunction, the defendant had received from the Investors Bankstocks Corporation, four hundred and thirty shares of the stock of the New York Title and Mortgage Company.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 285, 114 Conn. 456, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schofield-conn-1932.