People v. Wyman
People v. Wyman
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment convicting him of the crime of embezzlement, and also from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The defendant was acting as the attorney for the prosecuting witness, Mrs. Annie Philp, in a contest before the United States land office involving her right to enter and purchase from the United States 160 acres of timber land. The case was finally adjudged in her favor, and the defendant as her attorney was notified of the fact by the register or receiver of the United
The foregoing is in substance a statement of all the evidence in the case, and in our opinion it is not sufficient to justify the verdict. The complaint charging the defendant with the crime named in the information was laid before the magistrate, and the defendant arrested therefor, as early as September, 13, 1893, and, in order to warrant the conviction of defendant, it was necessary for the people to prove that he had before that date fraudulently converted to his own use the money alleged to have been embezzled by him, and the evidence does not show this.
In considering the question of defendant’s guilt or innocence of the particular crime with which he is charged, his failure to make payment for the land after his arrest must be disregarded. That fact has no tendency whatever to show that defendant, prior to the filing of the information, converted the money therein referred to, and was improperly admitted in evidence. The only other facts relied upon to sustain the verdict are: 1. That defendant neglected up to the time of his arrest, a period of thirteen days, to cash the orders sent him and to pay for the land which Ms client desired to purchase from the government; and, 2. That when arrested he did not have on his person all of the money which had been intrusted to him for the purpose of making such payment, and did not offer to account for the same. These facts are clearly insufficient to prove that defendant had fraudulently appropriated the money of the client to his own use prior to the filing of the complaint upon which he was arrested. The fact that he did not have upon his person all of the money sent to him by his client was not of itself sufficient to justify the jury in finding or believing that he had fraudulently appropriated such money to his own use before his arrest, because such fact is not necessarily
Under these circumstances she must be deemed to have intrusted the money to defendant as her attorney to make payment for the land within the time allowed by the law and practice of the United States land department for that purpose, and so as to fully preserve her rights. The prosecuting witness never gave any different direction as to the time when the business should be transacted, and never made any demand for the money. It is very clear that, under these facts, the client could
If a demand had been made upon the defendant, either to return the money to his principal, or to make immediate payment into the United States land office, and he had refused, or, if the time when, under the terms of his employment, he was to make such payment, had expired at the time of his arrest, and there was no satisfactory explanation of the default of the defendant, in returning the money or in making payment for the land as directed, the case would be different, but upon the facts disclosed by this record, the defendant was improperly convicted.
Judgment and order reversed.
Beatty, C. J., and McFarland, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE v. C. H. WYMAN
- Cited By
- 11 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Criminal Law—Embezzlement—Proof of Fraudulent Conversion Essential.—In order to warrant the conviction of a defendant charged with embezzlement it is necessary for the people to prove that he had, before the date of the complaint for his arrest for the offense, fraudulently converted to his own use the money alleged to have been embezzled. Id.—Evidence—Failure to Apply Money After Arrest.—The failure of the defendant to apply the money as directed after his arrest must be disregarded in considering the question of his guilt or innocence of the crime charged, and is inadmissible in evidence. Id.—Insufficient Proof of Fraudulent Conversion.—The fact that the defendant neglected up to the time of his arrest to cash orders sent to him to pay for land to be purchased from the government, and, that when arrested he did not have on his person all of the money intrusted to him for that purpose, and did not offer to account for the same, are insufficient to prove that he had fraudulently appropriated the money to his own use prior to the filing of the complaint upon which he was arrested. Id.—Attorney and Client—Money Intrusted to Pay For Government Land—Unexpired Time For Payment.—Where money was sent by a client to his attorney to be paid over to the proper officer, within the time allowed by law and the practice of the United States land office, so as to preserve the right of the client to purchase land from the United States for which she had applied, and the time within which to make such payment had not expired when the defendant was arrested, nor until after the information against him was filed, and no demand had been made upon the attorney either to return the money to the client, or to make immediate payment into the United States land office, the attorney is not guilty of the crime of embezzlement, nor of a fraudulent conversion of the money.