State v. Stryker

236 P. 849, 118 Kan. 620, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 25,561
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 236 P. 849 (State v. Stryker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Stryker, 236 P. 849, 118 Kan. 620, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 251 (kan 1925).

Opinion

[621]*621The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

Defendant was convicted on three counts of an information charging embezzlement and forgery, and appeals.

The transactions occasioning the prosecution occurred in the year 1922. Defendant was arrested on May 30,1923, on a warrant issued on May 17. The preliminary examination occurred on June 27. The informátion was filed on October 30, and the trial occurred in December. One count of the information charged embezzlement of a bank check, referred to, for convenience, as the Gassman check. The other counts charged forgery of the indorsement on a check referred to as the Workman check, and embezzlement of the check.

The governing body of school district No. 2, Cowley county, was the board of education of Arkansas City. Defendant was clerk of the board. W. H. Lightstone, Jr., was treasurer. Defendant was also president of the Security National Bank of Arkansas City, and was active officer in charge of the bank’s affairs. The board of education erected a senior high-school building. George H. Gassman and the Workman Plumbing Company were contractors. An overpayment was made to each contractor, and each contractor refunded the overpayment by check.

The overpayment to Gassman was refunded by his check for $4,000, dated June 10, 1922, drawn on defendant’s bank, and payable to the order of Wm. Stryker, clerk of the board of education. The check was delivered to defendant personally by Gassman. On June 12 defendant handed the check to Ray Hume, a teller in the bank, and received from Hume for the check a cashier’s check for $4,000, dated June 12, and payable to W. M. Stryker, clerk of the board of education. The Gassman check was not indorsed, but Hume took it without indorsement because it was handed to him by an officer of the bank. When Hume had written the cashier’s check he laid it on defendant’s desk.

The bank and the office of the treasurer of the board of education were but a short distance apart. The treasurer, who'was the financial officer of the board, kept his account at the bank. Defendant-transacted much of his business as clerk at the bank, the treasurer frequently saw defendant at the bank, and defendant was frequently at the treasurer’s office. Defendant did not inform the treasurer of the Gassman check, the treasurer did not know of its existence, and [622]*622he never received the proceeds of it, or any money on account of the refunded $4,000.

On September 6 the cashier’s check, indorsed in defendant’s handwriting, was presented and paid. On September 6 a special $4,000 account appeared on the books of the bank, next to defendant’s personal account. On September 8 a check for $2,000, drawn by defendant, was presented. Ben T. Ausmus, the employee in the bookkeeping department of the bank having general charge of the books, took the check to defendant and told him it overdrew his account. Defendant said it went on the other account, and Ausmus directed a bookkeeper to charge the check to the $4,000 account. The remainder of the $4,000 account went out on September 11, on three checks, of $500, $817.36 and $682.64, respectively, and the account was closed on that day. On the same day two deposits of $817.36 and $682.64 appeared in the account of defendant’s mother, against which defendant was in the habit of drawing checks in her name. The deposit slips and checks relating to the $4,000 account, and the ledger sheet showing the account, were missing, and could not be produced at the trial. Defendant disposed of his interest in the bank in the latter part of January, 1923, and on May 28 left for California, to accept a position there on June 1.

The overpayment to the Workman Plumbing Company was refunded by its check for $2,607, dated August 31, 1922, drawn on the State Bank of Parsons, and payable to the order of “Treasurer School District No. 2.” The check was sent to defendant by mail. It came back to the Parsons bank bearing the indorsement, “W. H. Lightstone, Jr., Treas. School Dis. No. 2,” and was stamped paid on September 9. As in the case of the Gassman check, defendant said nothing to the treasurer about the Workman check, the treasurer knew nothing of it, did not indorse it, and received nothing from it or on account of it.

Defendant admitted appropriation of the proceeds of the Workman check. It is a touching story, and was presented in such a way that it was much more moving than it would have been if defendant himself had told it on the witness stand. He did not, however, see fit to testify in his own behalf. Only an outline can be given here.

Throughout the month of September, 1922, the deposit balances of the treasurer of the board of education with the bank ranged from $70,000 to $80,000. When the Workman check came to defendant the bank was in a bad way. If defendant gave the check [623]*623to the treasurer, the treasurer would'deposit it in the bank, and the money might be lost. Of course defendant could not explain the delicate situation to the treasurer, and defendant undertook to save that money for the board of education by buying Liberty bonds. He took a draft of his own bank on the New England National Bank of Kansas City, Mo., for the amount of the check, $2,607, and sent the draft to the H. P. Wright Investment Company, of Kansas City, Mo., a dealer in investment securities, to pay for the bonds purchased. A statement of the transaction was rendered by the investment company to defendant on September 5, 1922. As indicated above, defendant severed his connection with the bank in January, 1923, and on May 28, 1923, left Kansas City, Mo., for California. It became known that a warrant for his arrest had been issued; a telegram was sent to him, and he returned. After he was arrested and gave bond, he went immediately to Parsons, and among his papers in a box there was a manila envelope, which contained the Workman account, $2,600 in Liberty bonds and $7 in cash. Two of the bonds were for $1,000 each. After the preliminary examination, but before the information was filed, and probably on July 28, 1923, defendant made a formal tender of those bonds and that money to the board of education. The tender was in writing, and the material portion reads as follows:

“I . . . hereby tender you United States government bonds in the sum of twenty-six hundred (12,600) dollars, par value, together with interest coupons of April, 1923, and each period thereafter, and also the sum of seven ($7) dollars cash held by me as clerk of the said board of education, which said bonds were purchase by me from the proceeds of the check drawn by the Workman Plumbing Company to school district number two, dated August 31, 1922, the proceeds of which said check the said undersigned used to purchase said bonds, for the reason that said bank, at said time, was in an apparent failing condition, and the same was done to protect said school board, and which said bonds and money has been held by 'the undersigned in trust for said board of education and school district number 2, and which said bonds, together with the said seven ($7) dollars, the undersigned, W. M. Stryker, hereby tenders to the said board of education, and school district No. 2.”

The attorney for the board made a memorandum of the numbers of the bonds, but the tender was refused, and thus the effort of a faithful and resourceful officer to protect funds needed for educational purposes came to naught.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 P. 849, 118 Kan. 620, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stryker-kan-1925.