State v. Wacker

243 P. 1026, 120 Kan. 387, 1926 Kan. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 6, 1926
DocketNo. 26,202
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 243 P. 1026 (State v. Wacker) 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. Wacker, 243 P. 1026, 120 Kan. 387, 1926 Kan. LEXIS 387 (kan 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.;

This is the appeal of Henry W. Wacker from a conviction and sentence upon the charge of embezzling, misapplying and abstracting funds of the Home State Bank of Greensburg, of which he was president. The information contained five counts, [388]*388three of which were dismissed before final submission to the jury. Of the two submitted, defendant was found not guilty on count one, and guilty on count two, which charged:

“That on the 25th day of July, 1923, in Kiowa county, in the state of Kansas, one Henry W. Wacker, then and there being the president of the Home State Bank, a banking corporation of the city of Greensburg, Kiowa county, Kansas, did then and there draw his personal check in the sum of ten thousand ninety-three and 75/100 dollars (310,093.75) on the Home State Bank of Greensburg, Kan., in favor and payable to the Warren Mortgage Company 'of Emporia, Kan., and that said check is in words and figures as follows: [A copy of the check is set out.]
“And that on July 28, 1923, when said check was returned to the said the Home State Bank for payment the said Henry W. Wacker caused said check to be paid out of a certain account then carried in said bank to the credit of ‘Greenleaf & Kirby Loan Acc’t,’ he the said Henry W. Wacker not having sufficient funds, of his) own with which to pay said check, and well knowing the facts in the premises, and did in the manner and form aforesaid convert to his own use and embezzle, misapply and abstract the said funds belonging to said account and to said bank, with the intent then and there to defraud, injure and deceive the Home State Bank, its officers and agents, contrary,” etc.

Defendant filed a motion to quash this count of the information. This motion was overruled.

The evidence on behalf of the state pertaining to the count upon which the conviction was had is substantially as follows: The bank was organized in 1906. Defendant became its president and active managing officer about 1920, and continued to hold that position until the bank failed and was taken charge of by the bank commissioner October 10,1923. Mr. J. W. Greenleaf, a ranch owner of Kiowa county, was indebted to Robert W. Kirby of Urbana, Ohio, in the sum of $20,000, evidenced by a note and secured by a mortgage on his real property. This mortgage being due, and some interest having accumulated, in January, 1923, Harry Kirby, representing the mortgagee, went to Greensburg and had an understanding with Mr. Greenleaf about the payment of this loan, which contemplated that .Mr. Greenleaf would get a new loan on the land from the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank, and the Kirby mortgage with interest was to be released upon the payment of $21,000. Mr. Wacker was local agent for the Land Bank and took Mr. Greenleaf’s application for a loan, which was approved in the sum of $25,000. Before the requirements upon the abstracts were fully complied with, the Land Bank sent Mr. Wacker the sum of $20,000 to be used in paying the Kirby mortgage and other prior [389]*389liens. This remittance was received by Mr. Wacker March 29, 1923, and by him deposited in the Home State Bank in a separate account opened for that purpose, under the name of Greenleaf-Kirby loan account. None of this money was used to pay the Kirby loan. On July 2,1923, the Kirby note and mortgage, with release thereon, having been sent to the Home State Bank, with draft for $21,000 to be paid upon their delvery, Mr. Wacker had the release recorded, but did not pay the draft.

It was Mr. Greenleaf s plan to take up the Kirby loan with the $20,000 remittance of the Land Bank of March 29, and $1,000 he was to get from K. Weir.

Mr. J. T. Hardy, having purchased land in Kiowa county, which was mortgaged to the Warren Mortgage Company of Emporia, on July 12, 1923, gave Mr. Walker his check for $10,093.75 to pay that mortgage. This land purchased by Hardy was no part of the Greenleaf land, and the check here mentioned had nothing to do with the Greenleaf-Kirby loan. Mr. Wacker deposited this check to his credit in his own personal account at the Home State Bank. On July 25, 1923, Mr. Wacker executed his personal check payable to the Warren Mortgage Company for $10,093.75, and sent it to that company to pay the loan it held on the land purchased by Hardy. This is the check set out in count two of the information. This check was received by the Warren Mortgage Company and cleared in the usual manner. It reached the Home State Bank, for payment, with other items from its Kansas City correspondent, July 28. On that date Mr.. Wacker’s personal account showed a balance to his credit of $3,810.78, which was not sufficient to pay this check. The assistant cashier, Mr. Brown, took the check to Mr. Wacker and asked what he should do with it. Mr. Wacker, after examining the ledger accounts of the bank, told Mr. Brown to pay it and charge it to Greenleaf-Kirby loan account. It was so charged ■ and paid.

On October 9, 1923, Mr. Wacker made a deposit slip showing a deposit of $5,600 to the Greenleaf-Kirby loan account, which was credited to that account October 10. Included in this was a check of K. Weir for $1,000. On October 10, Mr. Wacker made a deposit slip showing a deposit of $4,900 to the GreenleaLKirby loan account. This slip was on the file when the bank commissioner took charge of the bank, the same day, and was later credited to that account. This included a $1,000 check of Dan Imthurn to Mr. [390]*390Wacker in part payment of cattle. After the bank failed, payment was stopped on this check and it was charged back to the account.

It is contended that the information is fatally defective in that it did not state the character of the bailment; that if Wacker was the owner of the money he could not be convicted of embezzling it; if he was a bailee of the money, the character of the bailment should have been set out; and upon this point State v. Griffith, 45 Kan. 142, 25 Pac. 616, is relied upon. Concerning that case it is said, in State v. Johnson, 109 Kan. 239, 241, 199 Pac. 104:

“The rule of that case is founded upon, the generality of the term bailee and the different kinds of responsibility that may grow out of that relationship; it has no application where the embezzlement is charged to have been committed by an officer of a corporation.”

The accuracy of the rule announced in State v. Griffith, supra, is debatable at the best (see 20 C. J. 473, 474, and cases there cited), and where the party charged with embezzlement is a bailee, the rule should be applied only when a statement of the specific character of the bailment is important properly to inform the defendant of the nature of the charge in order that he may have his defense. However, the reasoning by which it is sought to apply the rule announced in State v. Griffith, supra, is unsound; for, if Wacker was not the owner of this money it does not necessarily follow that he was bailee of it. He was not, of course, the owner of it at any time. It originally belonged to the Land Bank and was sent to Wacker to be used in paying the Kirby loan. When it was deposited in the bank, the ownership of the mopey so deposited passed to the bank, and the bank thereby became indebted to the party lawfully entitled to withdraw it. (See 3 R. C. L. 519; 7 C. J.

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Related

State v. Finney
40 P.2d 411 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)
State v. Woodbury
294 P. 928 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1931)
State v. Robinson
263 P. 1081 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1928)
Docking v. National Surety Co.
252 P. 201 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 P. 1026, 120 Kan. 387, 1926 Kan. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wacker-kan-1926.