Sansberry v. State
Sansberry v. State
Opinion of the Court
The defendant was indicted for and convicted of thé crime of embezzlement.
The facts, so far as it is necessary for us to state them, are: That the Alabama Chemical Company, a corporation, sold a lot of commercial fertilizer to the defendant on credit. It was understood between the parties that the title to the goods was to remain in the Chemical Company until they were paid for. The defendant was a merchant, and the goods were delivered
It appears that the defendant bought from the Chemical Company, under the above contract, more, than $8,000 worth of the fertilizers, and that he sold them to his customers on credit. Some of the sales of the fertilizer ■ were evidenced simply by open accounts, but many of the sales were evidenced by the notes which defendant took from the purchasers. The defendant seems to have given to the Chemical Company notes for his indebtedness, and as collateral security for the payment of said notes to have transferred a number of- the above notes and accounts. Some time in August, 1910, the company returned to the defendant the said collaterals and obtained from him receipts which are in words and figures substantially as follows: “Trustees Receipt. Daleville, Ala., August 22, 1910. Received of Alabama Chemical Company for collection for its account the within described notes, accounts, mortgages and other evidences of debt due them. The Alabama .Chemical Company hereby appoints A. M. Sansberry as their trustee to hold the within named notes, accounts, mortgages and other evidences of debt W collection for said company’s account and proceeds of said collections to be
It appears from the evidence that certainly a large number of the parties to whom the defendant sold the fertilizers were regular customers of the defendant; that, in addition to the fertilizers, they bought other articles and supplies from him during said year, all of which, along Avith the fertilizer, Avhether the sale of the fertilizer Avas evidenced by note or not, Avere charged in one general account against each of such customers. When the customers Avhose accounts Avere .so situated paid the defendant money or delivered cotton to the defendant in .payment of or as a credit upon their accounts, as a rule, according to the evidence, such payments Avere made for the purpose of being applied to the accounts generally, and not to the specific extinguishment of the debts for fertilizers. Some of the defendant’s customers, howeA^er, made payments in money or in cotton Avith specific directions that the payments so made should be applied to their fertilizer debts. The defendant seems to have mingled the funds collected in payment of the fertilizer debts with his OAvn funds, and all moneys collected by him Avere placed by him, in his OAvn name, on deposit Avith a bank in Enterprise. Many
As the trial court, in its charge to the jury eliminated the first three counts of the indictment from the consideration of the jury, the indictment, so far as the present record is concerned, consists of the last three counts. These counts charge that the defendant embezzled or fraudulently converted to his own use about 12,000 pounds of lint cotton, of the value of about $1,400, the property of said Chemical Company.
When the true situation of the parties to the transaction out of which this prosecution arose is considered— when their relative rights, duties, obligations, and powers, as fixed by the real contract between them, are thoroughly understood — it is evident that the defendant, if the evidence in the case is to be believed, was not guilty of embezzling any of the cotton of the Alabama Chemical Company. The defendant owed the Chemical Company a debt to be paid, not in cotton, but in money. He received from the Chemical Company certain col-laterals, with authority to collect for the company’s benefit and remit the money so collected. It Avas not the expectation of the Chemical Company that the defendant Avould ship to it a bale of cotton Avhich he might receiA^e in payment of any of the collateral notes or accounts. Says the witness Adams, a Avitness for the state and an agent of the Chemical Company through whom it had many of its transactions with the defendant relative to this matter, “of course, it Avas understood
The contract under which, the Chemical Company shipped the fertilizers to the defendant is illustrative of the principles of law which govern the case. Under that contract the title to the fertilizers was to remain in the company. The defendant, however, had the power, under that contract, to sell the fertilizers. He was, however, upon a sale for cash, to remit the cash to the company. Suppose he had sold $100 worth of the fertilizer for cash and had fraudulently converted that cash to his own use. Could it be successfully contended that he would have been, under such circumstances, guilty of embezzling the fertilizers so sold? The question, it seems to us,.carries with it is own answer. When the act. itself is legal, the law will'not inquire into the motive which prompted the act. In the present case there is not a scintilla of doubt about the proposition that the defendant possessed the right to sell the cotton.
If he was guilty of embezzlement, he was guilty of embezzling the proceeds of the cotton and not the cotton. — Gray v. State, 160 Ala. 107, 49 South. 678. Having the authority to sell the cotton, the defendant, even if he sold it with the intent to fraudulently convert the proceeds to his own use, was not guilty of embezzling the cotton. — State v. Crosswhite, 130 Mo. 358, 32 S. W. 991, 51 Am. St. Rep. 571.
There are á number of. other questions presented by this record, but they may not again arise in this case, and we will not discuss them.
Reversed and remanded.
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