State v. Geyer
State v. Geyer
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff in error was convicted in the Passaic Quarter Sessions of the crime of embezzlement, under section 184 of the Crimes act (Pamph. L. 1898, p. 844), which declares (inter alia) that any agent, entrusted with the collection or care of moneys, who shall fraudulently take or convert the same or any part thereof to his own use, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
Thé Supreme Court affirmed the conviction, and the record is now brought to this court for review.
The case was tried by the judge of the Quarter Sessions, trial by jury having been waived. Tire only question now presented is whether there was any evidence to support the inference that the defendant fraudulently converted to his own use the money in question.
There was evidence tending to show that Emil Geering, a resident of Passaic county, instituted in the Court of Chancery a suit, for divorce against his wife, who was resident in Switzerland; that the defendant, Geyer, then an attorney-at-law and solicitor in Chancery of this state, was employed by Mrs. Geering to defend the suit, and accepted such employment; that acting as her agent he entered into negotiations with the husband for a settlement of her claim for -alimony and her inchoate right of dower in the husband’s real estate; that, without the wife’s knowledge or consent, Geyer made an agreement with Mr. Geering that if he, Geering, would place in Geyer’s hands $5,000 for purposes of settlement with the wife, with $200 for traveling expenses, be, Geyer, would visit the wife in Switzerland and settle with her for as little as she was willing to take, and that Geyer should, as between him and Geering, be entitled to retain' whatever was left of the $5,200 after satisfying the demands of Mrs. Geering; that pursuant to this arrangement Geering paid to Geyer the $5,-200; that the latter went to. Switzerland.and prevailed upon Mrs. .Geering to settle for $2,800, concealing from her the fact that a greater sum had been paid to him by Mr. Geering; that of the $2,800 he paid or accounted to her for only $2,400,
It seems to us clear that this evidence justified the trial court in concluding that Geyer fraudulently converted $400 of his client’s money to his own use, as charged in the indictment. Such, was the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court; but that court in its opinion erroneously treated the case as if it had been tried by jury. We are not able to concur with the intimation contained in the opinion that Mrs. Gecring’s right to the $2,200, possession of which was concealed from her and in effect deuied by Geyer, was any less clear than her right to the $400, which he admitted having in his possession. JSTor can we at all agree that Geyer’s conduct at the inception of this transaction was merely dishonorable, and ripened afterwards into actual dishonesty. According to the evidence upon which the conviction rests, the embezzlement was deliberately planned from the outset of the negotiations between Geyer and Mr. Geering.
The judgment under review should be affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chancellob, Swayze, Trenchard, Parker, Bergen, Mtnturn, Bogkrt, Vredenburgh, Cong-don, Sullivan, J'J. 30.
For reversal—Xone.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE, IN ERROR v. ROBERT P. GEYER, IN ERROR
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published