People v. Swaar
Before: Curtis
CURTIS, J.
Defendant was convicted of the crime of embezzlement and appeals from the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial. He first questions the sufficiency of the information upon which he was placed on trial. While the information may be subject to some of the defects claimed for it by appellant, we are of the opinion that it sets forth in reasonably clear and concise language the essential elements of the crime of embezzlement. We are unable to perceive how appellant could have been materially prejudiced by any of the alleged deficiencies in said information, even assuming that they are as glaring as appellant claims them to be.
It is next claimed that the evidence was not sufficient to justify the verdict. Particular stress is laid by appellant upon the receipt given by him for the bonds with which he is charged with embezzling. He insists that this receipt clearly shows that the bonds were delivered to him by the
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owner and complaining witness for the purpose of enabling him to raise money with which he could procure an oil lease, and that he and the complaining witness were to share equally in the profits of such investment. If the evidence in the case substantiated appellant’s claim that the receipt showed the true and correct terms and - conditions under which the bonds had been delivered to him, we might concede the force of appellant’s arguments. The receipt was written by appellant himself, some days after the bonds had been delivered to him. The complaining witness was appellant’s father-in-law, and testified that he read the receipt to the best of his ability, but that he could not read all the writing, as he was a poor scholar. He further testified that the sole purpose for which the bonds were delivered to appellant was in order that the latter could use them to show his good faith in negotiating for an oil lease, and that the bonds were to be returned to him in their original form, upon the completion of said negotiations—if the lease was consummated, or if appellant failed in his endeavor to secure a lease—in either event, the bonds were to be returned intact to him, the owner. While this testimony of the complaining witness was contradicted by that of his daughter, the wife of appellant (the appellant himself was not a witness in the case) the jury evidently accepted the version of the transaction given by the complaining witness. His testimony was sufficient to show that the bonds were simply entrusted to the defendant for a certain and definite purpose, and not given, or the title thereto transferred, to appellant as claimed by the latter. The evidence further shows that the bonds, three in number, and of the par value of $2,500, were hypothecated by appellant with a bank as security for the personal obligations of appellant, and that one of said bonds, of the value of $1,000, had never been recovered at the time of the trial, which evidence would tend to prove that appellant, after the bonds had been entrusted to him, without right and fraudulently converted them to his own use. The evidence on the whole was, in our opinion, sufficient to justify the verdict against the appellant.
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