State v. Wright

36 A.2d 657, 70 R.I. 39, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 24, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 657 (State v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wright, 36 A.2d 657, 70 R.I. 39, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 13 (R.I. 1944).

Opinion

*40 Condon, J.

This is an indictment for embezzlement. The case is here on numerous exceptions taken in the superior court by the defendant, but we find it necessary to consider only his exception to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict of not guilty and several other exceptions to the admission of evidence, and to a portion of the trial justice’s charge to the jury.

Defendant was the treasurer of the town of Foster from May 1926 until August 1, 1940, when he resigned at the request of the town council. Prior thereto,. on March 25, 1940, an official audit of his accounts had been ordered by the financial town meeting. Shortly after that time the defendant hired an auditor on his own account to also audit his books. The official audit disclosed a “shortage” in his accounts of $23,715.59.

Defendant’s auditor testified for the defendant and he did not deny either the fact that the defendant was “short”, according to his books and vouchers, or the amount of such shortage; but he claimed that this was only an apparent shortage, and that, in reality, the defendant had expended more money in the town’s behalf than he had received. To *41 support this conclusion he relied mainly upon certain evidence, which had been submitted to him, of expenditures for the maintenance and operation of the town’s police department, not appearing in defendant’s books. He testified that he considered it good accounting practice to receive such evidence, if satisfactorily authenticated, in determining defendant’s true financial situation in relation to the town. The official auditors relied only upon the defendant’s vouchers and books of account.

Part of the time during which defendant held the office of treasurer from May 1928 to August 1, 1940, when he resigned, he was also chief of the police department and town sergeant. He testified that during this period of about twelve years he had annually expended certain sums of money in operating the police department, for most of which expenditures he produced no documentary record. In support of his claim he relied on certain checks drawn on his personal funds in the bank, on personal estimates of police needs for ammunition, equipment and transportation, and on estimates which were made, by his subordinates in the department, from memory only, of sums which they had received from him in cash for personal services. Some of these subordinates also testified in the same manner as to the transportation requirements of the department and that they understood those were paid for personally by the defendant.

On this evidence there was a clear conflict whether defendant had actually spent such sums on behalf of the town or not. Inasmuch as these claimed expenditures were not authenticated by proper vouchers, were not recorded in his books and had not appeared in his annual reports to the financial town meeting, it was for the jury to say whether they believed the defendant and his witnesses. On- defendant’s motion for a directed verdict of not guilty, the' state was entitled to have the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to it, in accordance with the well-established rule. We are of the opinion that the superior court did not err *42 in ruling that the evidence here was sufficient to make an issue for the jury. Defendant’s exception to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict of not guilty is therefore overruled.

The next question is whether the jury properly understood the narrow issue before them or were confused and led astray by certain rulings of the superior court admitting evidence objected to by defendant as prejudicial. Several of the defendant’s exceptions which he took to such rulings, and which we believe to have merit, will now be considered.

- The issue on trial was a simple one. Did defendant embezzle the funds of the town of Foster? That was the only issue. Whether he kept his accounts as required by law, or whether he was indebted to the town and how much, or whether he had placed his property beyond reach of creditors, was not the ultimate question for the jury on this indictment. Evidence that was designed to bring any such issues before them, without first being shown to have a proper connection with the sole issue in' the case, could only have the effect of misleading them or obscuring such issue, namely, whether defendant had fraudulently appropriated the town’s funds to his own use.

We are of the opinion that the state erred in this respect almost at the outset of the trial. Its first witness was the town clerk of Foster, who, by virtue of his office, is clerk of the financial town meeting and recorder of the land records of the town. After having been examined as to the time when the town meeting ordered an official audit of the defendant’s accounts with the town, he was later asked: “I will ask you whether or not, directing your attention of the amount to the month of May, 1940, I will ask you whether or not a conveyance of Mr. James M. Wright’s property to Rex was not recorded in the books?” The defendant took an exception to the overruling of his objection to that question, and this is the first exception set out in his bill.

*43 The obvious purpose of that question, as the state now contends, was to show that, after the official audit had been ordered, defendant transferred his real estate beyond reach of his creditors, thus raising an inference of his consciousness of guilt of the offense charged in the indictment. Chaufty v. DeVries, 41 R. I. 1, is cited by the state in support of the admission of the testimony for such purpose. Whether or not that case, which was a civil case for damages, is authority for the admission of like evidence in a criminal case, we need not determine now. Assuming, without deciding, that it was error to admit the deed for the purpose contended by the state, we are of the opinion that such admission did not prejudice the defendant in view of the testimony on his behalf that, after the town had ordered the official audit, the transfer was made by him in order to obtain funds for the purpose of retaining an accountant to audit his books. For this reason defendant’s first exception is overruled.

However, the admission of that evidence opened the door for the state to introduce other evidence concerning the nature and probable legal effect of the transfer, which we do believe clearly prejudiced the defendant. Thus when Nathan M. Wright, Jr., a lawyer, was testifying for the defendant, the court allowed the state’s attorney, over defendant’s objections, to ask him the following questions: “Mr. Wright, isn’t it a matter of fact that if a mortgage was negotiated on this property in May after it was transferred to Mr. Rex, and the bank granted the mortgage to Mr. Rex, that to the extent of the mortgage granted, that interest was put beyond the reach of creditors, if there were any creditors?” The next question was: “If later on it was found that the town had a claim against the town treasurer, they could not reach that particular interest as it belonged to the bank, isn’t that so? ... You see no necessity why he should have transferred to Mr. Rex first, is that correct? . . . On that hypothetical question.”

*44 These questions were inadmissible.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 657, 70 R.I. 39, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wright-ri-1944.