A count in an indictment which charges that the accused,
"being then and there an assistant, clerk, or employee in or
connected with the business or operations of the United States Post
Office in the City of Mobile, in the State of Alabama, did embezzle
the sum of sixteen hundred and fifty-two and 59/100 dollars, money
of the United States, of the value of sixteen hundred and fifty-two
and 59/100 dollars, the said money being the personal property of
the United States,"
is defective in that it does not further allege that such sum
came into his possession in that capacity.
The count having been demurred to and the demurrer having been
overruled, the objection to it is not covered by Rev.Stat. § 1025,
and is not cured by verdict.
Embezzlement is the fraudulent appropriation of property by a
person to whom it has been entrusted or into whose hands it has
lawfully come, and it differs from larceny in the fact that the
original taking of the property was lawful, or with the consent of
the owner, while in larceny the felonious intent must have existed
at the time of the taking.
Plaintiff in error, late Assistant Postmaster of the City of
Mobile, was indicted and convicted of embezzling certain moneys of
the United States to the amount of $1,652.59.
There were four counts in the indictment, to one of which a
demurrer was sustained and upon two others defendant was acquitted.
The fourth count, upon which he was convicted, charged that
"the said George S. Moore, being then and there an assistant,
clerk, or employee in or connected with the business
Page 160 U. S. 269
or operations of the United States Post Office in the City of
Mobile, in the State of Alabama, did embezzle the sum of sixteen
hundred and fifty-two and 59/100 dollars ($1,652.59), money of the
United States, of the value of sixteen hundred and fifty-two and
59/100 dollars ($1,652.59), the said money being the personal
property of the United States."
Moore, having been sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor, sued
out this writ of error.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Defendant was indicted under the first section of the Act of
March 3, 1875, "to punish certain larcenies, and the receivers of
stolen goods,� 18 Stat. 479, which enacts
"that any person who shall embezzle, steal, or purloin any
money, property, record, voucher, or valuable thing whatever, of
the moneys, goods, chattels, records, or property of the United
States shall be deemed guilty of felony,"
etc.
The principal assignment of error is to the action of the court
in overruling a demurrer to the fourth count of the indictment,
which charges, in the words of the statute, that
"the said George S. Moore, being then and there an assistant,
clerk, or employee in or connected with the business or operations
of the United States Post Office in the City of Mobile, in the
State of Alabama, did embezzle the sum of _____, money of the
United States, of the value of _____, the said money being the
personal property of the United States."
Embezzlement is the fraudulent appropriation of property by a
person to whom such property has been entrusted or into whose hands
it has lawfully come. It differs from larceny in the fact that the
original taking of the property was lawful,
Page 160 U. S. 270
or with the consent of the owner, while in larceny the felonious
intent must have existed at the time of the taking.
It is objected to the indictment in this case that there is no
direct allegation that defendant was an assistant, clerk, or
employee in or connected with the business or operations of the
post office at Mobile, that the money of the United States is not
identified or described, and that there is no allegation that it
came into the possession of the defendant by virtue of his
employment.
The act in question has never been interpreted by this Court,
nor has our attention been called to any case where it has received
a construction in this particular, except that of
McCann v.
United States, 2 Wyo. 274, decided in the Territorial Supreme
Court of Wyoming, in which the allegation was that
"McCann, . . . at and within the district aforesaid, twenty
thousand pounds of sugar . . . of the goods, chattels, and property
of the United States of America, then and there being found, then
and there feloniously and fraudulently did embezzle, steal, and
purloin,"
etc. This allegation was held to be defective in charging a mere
legal conclusion, "leaving it impossible to determine whether the
offense was committed, and the conclusion correct." It was said
that the indictment for this offense must set forth the actual
fiduciary relation and its breach, that the indictment did not
identify the offense on the record, and did not secure the accused
in his right to plead a former acquittal or conviction to a second
prosecution for the offense. It was held that the words "to
embezzle" were equivalent to the words "to commit embezzlement,"
and that a count in the words of the statute was not sufficient;
that
"all the ingredients of fact that are elemental to the
definition must be alleged, so as to bring the defendant precisely
and clearly within the statute. If that can be done by simply
following the words of the statute, that will do; if not, other
allegations must be used."
The general principle here alluded to has been applied by this
Court in several cases.
United States v. Carll,
105 U. S. 611;
United States v.
Cooke, 17 Wall. 168;
United States v.
Cruikshank, 92 U. S. 542.
In the case of
United States v. Northway, 120 U.
S. 327,
Page 160 U. S. 271
the word "embezzle" was recognized as having a settled technical
meaning of its own, like the words "steal, take, and carry away,"
as used to define the offense of larceny. In this case, the
allegation was that the defendant, "as such President and agent"
(of a national bank),
"then and there had and received in and into his possession
certain of moneys and funds of said banking association, . . . and
then and there, being in possession of the said [defendant] as such
President and agent aforesaid, he, the said [defendant] then and
there . . . wrongly, unlawfully, and with intent to injure and
defraud said banking association, did embezzle and convert to his .
. . own use."
In respect to this, it was said to be quite clear that the
allegation was sufficient, as it distinctly alleged that the moneys
and funds charged to have been embezzled were at the time in the
possession of the defendant as President and agent. "This
necessarily means," said the court,
"that they had come into his possession in his official
character, so that he held them in trust for the use and benefit of
the association. In respect to those funds, the charge against him
is that he embezzled them by converting them to his own use. This
we think fully and accurately describes the offense of embezzlement
under the act by an officer and agent of the association."
In the case of
Claassen v. United States, 142 U.
S. 140, an allegation similar in substance and effect
was also held to be sufficient. The indictment, said the Court,
"avers that the defendant was president of a national banking
association; that by virtue of his office he received and took into
his possession certain bonds (fully described), the property of the
association, and that, with intent to injure and defraud the
association, he embezzled the bonds and converted them to his own
use. On principle and precedent, no further averment was requisite
to a complete and sufficient description of the crime charged."
The cases reported from the English courts and from the courts
of the several states have usually arisen under statutes limiting
the offense to certain officers, clerks, agents, or servants of
individuals or corporations, and the rulings that the
Page 160 U. S. 272
agency or fiduciary relation must be averred, as well as the
fact that the money embezzled had come into the possession of the
prisoner in that capacity, are not wholly applicable to a statute
which extends to every person, regardless of his employment, or of
the fact that the money had come into his possession by virtue of
any office or fiduciary relation he happened to occupy. These cases
undoubtedly hold with great uniformity that the relationship must
be averred in the exact terms of the statute, that the property
embezzled must be identified with great particularity, and that it
must also be averred to have come into the possession of the
prisoner by virtue of his fiduciary relation to the owner of the
property.
Thus, in
Commonwealth v. Smart, 6 Gray, 15, it was held
that an indictment which averred that the defendant "was entrusted"
by the owner "with certain property, the same being the subject of
larceny" (describing it), "and to deliver the same to" the owner
"on demand," and afterwards "refused to deliver said property to
said" owner, "and feloniously did embezzle and fraudulently convert
to his own use, the same then and there being demanded of him by
said" owner was fatally defective by reason of omitting to state
the purpose for which the defendant was entrusted with the property
or what property he fraudulently converted to his own use. So in
People v. Allen, 5 Denio 76, under a statute limiting the
offense to clerks and servants, it was held that a count charging
the defendant with having collected and received certain money as
the "agent" of an individual was defective.
On the other hand, in
Lowenthal v. State, 32 Ala. 589,
an indictment charging, in the form prescribed by the Code, that
the defendant, being agent or clerk of another,
"embezzled or fraudulently converted to his own use money to
about the amount of eighteen hundred dollars ($1,800) . . . which
came into his possession by virtue of his employment"
was sufficient.
See also People v. Tomlinson, 66 Cal.
344;
Commonwealth v. Hussey, 111 Mass. 432. It was held,
however, in
State v. Stimson, 24 N.J.L. 9, that it was not
sufficient to describe the offense in the words of the statute, and
that there should be some description either
Page 160 U. S. 273
of the number of denomination of the coins and of the notes, and
also an averment of the value of the notes.
Indeed, the rulings in this class of cases became in some
instances so strict that statutes were passed in several of the
states defining what should be necessary and sufficient in
indictments for embezzlement. Thus, in the Criminal Code of
Illinois, it is declared to be sufficient to allege generally in
the indictment an embezzlement, fraudulent conversion or taking
with intent to embezzle and convert funds of any person, bank,
corporation, company, or copartnership to a certain value or
amount, without specifying any particulars of such embezzlement.
Under this statute, it was held proper for the court to permit all
the evidence of what the defendant did by reason of his
confidential relations with the banking firm whose clerk he was, to
go to the jury, and if the jury found from the whole evidence any
funds or credits for money had been embezzled or fraudulently
converted to his own use by defendant, it was sufficient to
maintain the charge of embezzlement. "The view taken by the
defense," said the court,
"of this statute is too narrow and technical to be adopted. It
has a broader meaning, and when correctly read it will embrace all
wrongful conduct by confidential clerks, agents, or servants, and
leave no opportunity for escape from just punishment on mere
technical objections not affecting the guilt or innocence of the
party accused."
Ker v. People, 110 Ill. 627, 647.
The ordinary form of an indictment for larceny is that J. S.,
late of, etc., at, etc., in the county aforesaid (specifying the
property), of the goods and chattels of one J. N., "feloniously did
steal, take, and carry away." In other words, the whole gist of the
indictment lies in the allegation that the defendant stole, took,
and carried away certain specified goods belonging to the person
named. The indictment under consideration is founded upon a statute
to punish larcenies of government property. It applies to "any
person," and uses the words "embezzle, steal, or purloin" in the
same connection, and as applicable to the same persons and to the
same property. There can be no doubt that a count charging the
prisoner
Page 160 U. S. 274
with stealing or purloining certain described goods, the
property of the United States, would be sufficient, without further
specification of the offense, but whether an indictment charging in
such general terms that the prisoner "embezzled" the property of
the government (identifying it) would be sufficient we do not
undertake to determine, although we think the rules of good
pleading would suggest, even if they did not absolutely require,
that the indictment should set forth the manner or capacity in
which the defendant became possessed of the property.
For another reason, however, we think the indictment in this
case is insufficient. If the words charging the defendant with
being an employee of the post office be material, then it is clear,
under the cases above cited, that it should be averred that the
money embezzled came into his possession by virtue of such
employment. Unless this be so, the allegation of employment is
meaningless, and might even be misleading since the defendant might
be held for property received in a wholly different capacity --
such, for instance, as a simple bailee of the government. In the
absence of a statutory regulation, the authorities upon this
subject are practically uniform. Wharton's Criminal Law § 1942;
Rex v. Snowley, 4 Car. & P. 390;
Commonwealth v.
Simpson, 9 Met. 138;
People v. Sherman, 10 Wend. 298;
Rex v. Prince, 2 Car. & P. 517;
Rex v.
Thorley, 1 Mood.C.C. 343;
Rex v. Bakewell, Russ.
& Ry. 35.
On the other hand, if these words be rejected as surplusage and
mere
descriptio personae, then the property embezzled
should be identified with particularity, the general rule, in the
absence of a statute, being that an averment of the embezzlement of
a certain amount in dollars and cents is insufficient.
Rex v.
Furneaux, Russ. & Ry. 336;
Rex v. Flower, 5 B.
& C. 736;
Commonwealth v. Sawtelle, 11 Cush. 142;
People v. Bogart, 36 Cal. 245;
People v. Cox, 40
Cal. 275;
Barton v. State, 29 Ark. 68;
State v.
Thompson, 42 Ark. 517;
State v. Ward, 48 Ark. 36.
There are undoubtedly cases which hold that where the crime
consists not in the embezzlement of a single definite quantity of
coin or bills, but in a failure to account for a number
Page 160 U. S. 275
of small sums received -- a series of petty and continuous
speculations -- where it would be manifestly impossible, probably
for the defendant himself, but much more for the prosecution, to
tell of what the money embezzled consisted, an allegation of a
particular amount is sufficient. These cases, however, are confined
to public officers or to the officers of corporations, and where
the embezzlement consists of a single amount of property, the
general rule above stated still holds good. The leading case upon
this point is that of
People v. McKinney, 10 Mich. 54, 89.
In this case, the Treasurer of the State of Michigan was charged
with the embezzlement of $4,000 belonging to the state. It was held
that, as the treasurer had by law the entire custody and management
of the public money, with authority to receive such descriptions of
funds as he chose, the public could exercise no control or constant
supervision over him, and that it would be wholly impracticable to
trace or identify the particular pieces of money or bills received
by him, and hence that the allegation of a certain amount was
sufficient. This case has been followed by several others, and may
be said to apply to all instances where it would be impracticable
to set forth or identify the particular character of the property
embezzled.
State v. Munch, 22 Minn. 67;
State v.
Ring, 29 Minn. 78;
State v. Smith, 13 Kan. 274, 294;
State v. Carrick, 16 Nev. 120;
United States v.
Bornemann, 36 F. 257. In some jurisdictions, however, notably
in England, California, Louisiana, and Massachusetts, the
difficulty has been entirely remedied by statute. Greaves' Cr.Law
156;
Rex v. Grove, 1 Moody Cr.Cas. 447;
Commonwealth
v. Butterick, 100 Mass. 1;
Commonwealth v. Bennett,
118 Mass. 443;
People v. Treadwell, 69 Cal. 226;
State
v. Thompson, 32 La.Ann. 796.
If, then, the indictment in this case had charged that the
defendant, being then and there assistant, clerk, or employee in or
connected with the business or operations of the United States Post
Office in the City of Mobile, embezzled the sum stated, and had
further alleged that such sum came into his possession in that
capacity, we should have held the indictment
Page 160 U. S. 276
sufficient notwithstanding the general description of the
property embezzled as consisting of so many dollars and cents. But
if the words charging him with being in the employ of the
government be stricken out, then there would be nothing left to
show why the property embezzled could not be identified with
particularity, and the general rule above cited would apply. The
indictment would then reduce itself to a simple allegation that the
said George S. Moore, at a certain time and place, did embezzle the
sum of $1,652.59, money of the United States, of the value, etc.,
said money being the personal property of the United States, which
generality of description would be clearly bad. As there was a
demurrer to this count, which was overruled, we do not think the
objection is covered by Rev.Stat. § 1025, or cured by the
verdict.
As we hold the indictment in this case to be bad, we find it
unnecessary to consider the other errors assigned.
The judgment of the court below is therefore
Reversed, and the case remanded, with directions to quash
the indictment.