It was charged in the indictment that A. L. Knowles, while cashier of the Bloomburg State Bank, received as cashier and for the benefit of said bank the sum of $100.00 from Louis K. Dickson, which was owing to said bank; that appellant wilfully misapplied the money and credited it to the account of Endsley Oliver, which was one of the accounts carried by said bank.
Appellant entered a plea of guilty, but in his motion for rehearing he contends that the judgment of conviction is unauthorized by law for the reason that the indictment is under the statute charging the offense of embezzlement and that the penalty against him is not in conformity with such statute.
Article 544, P. C., 1925, reads as follows:
"Every president, cashier, director, teller, clerk, or agent of any State bank or bank and trust company incorporated under the laws of Texas, who embezzles, fraudulently abstracts or wilfully misapplies any of the moneys, funds or credits of such bank or bank and trust company, shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than five nor more than ten years. It shall not be necessary to allege in the indictment nor to prove on the trial that such embezzlement, abstraction or misapplication was without the consent of anyone. If the accused had the consent of anyone authorized to consent to his act, he may prove it."
By chapter 133, acts of 40th Legislature, Regular Session, article 544, supra, was amended, the amendment reading as follows:
"Amended by substituting 'two' for 'five' in the clause 'shall *Page 259 be confined in the penitentiary not less than five nor more than ten years'."
See Vernon's Ann. Texas P. C., 1925, vol. 1, art. 544, and 1933 supplement, p. 50; also Evans v. State, 110 Tex. Crim. 560.
Apparently counsel for appellant overlooked the fact that the statute in question has been amended.
The motion for rehearing is overruled.
Overruled.