State v. Oleson

Mount, J.

Appellant was convicted by a jury in the court below, under an information charging him with receiving a certain deposit in an insolvent bank of which he was cashier, knowing the bank to be insolvent. Appellant insists, first, that the statute under which the information was filed is unconstitutional, because the constitution in terms provides that an officer receiving such deposit shall be individually responsible therefor and, therefore, by implication, prevents the legislature from making the act criminal. The statute is as follows:

“Any president, director, manager, cashier or other officer of any banking institution who shall receive or assent to the reception of deposits after he shall have *151knowledge of the fact that such hanking institution is insolvent or in failing circumstances, shall he guilty of felony and punished as hereinafter provided.” § 7121, Bal. Code.

The constitution provides as follows:

“Any president, director, manager, cashier, or other officer of any banking institution, who shall receive or assent to the reception of deposits after he shall have knowledge of the fact that such banking institution is insolvent or in failing circumstances, shall be individually responsible for such deposits so received.” § 12, art. 12, of the constitution.

This court, in State ex rel. Murphy v. McBride, 29 Wash. 335, 70 Pac. 25, said:

“The constitution of this state is a limitation upon the powers of the legislature, and not a grant of power. Hence, before an act of the legislature may be declared unconstitutional, it must appear that the act is in conflict with some express provision of the constitution which prohibits the act or parts of the act complained of.”

See, also, Cooley, Const. Lim. (7th ed.), pp. 126, 236, 242. There is no contention that the provision of the constitution quoted expressly prohibits the legislature from making the reception of such deposits by an officer of the bank criminal; but it is argued that, because the constitution provides that the officer shall be “individually responsible for such deposits so received,” there is an implication that he shall not be made criminally liable. If the constitution, by the term “individually responsible,” means that such officer shall be liable civilly, we think it does not follow, as a necessary implication, that he shall be only liable civilly; and therefore the legislature may make him liable both civilly and criminally. The demurrer was therefore properly denied.

*152Appellant next insists that there was a fatal variance between the essential allegations of the information and the proof. The information is as follows, omitting the caption:

“In the name and by the authority of the State of Washington, I, A. E. Mead, prosecuting attorney of What-com county, state of Washington, come now here and give the court to understand and be informed, and on oath do accuse Frank Oleson of the crime of larceny, committed as follows: That for more than six months immediately preceding the 27th day of February, A. D. 1901, the Scandinavian-American Bank was a banking corporation organized and existing as such and doing business in the city of Hew Whatcom, Whatcom county, Washington, and on the 27th day of February, A. D. 1901, and for more than six months immediately preceding said date did during said time conduct a general banking business therein by receiving money for deposit and otherwise in the said city of Whatcom, Whatcom county, Washington; that on the 27th day of February, A. D. 1901, during all of the times aforesaid, the said Scandinavian-American Bank, a banking corporation as aforesaid, was insolvent and in failing circumstances; that on, to wit, the said 27th day of February, A. D. 1901, and for the six months immediately prior thereto, one Frank Oleson was the cashier of said banking institution and as such cashier of such banking institution did, on the 27th day of February, A. D. 1901,- receive and assent to the reception of a certain sum of money, to wit, the sum of one hundred and thirteen dollars ($113), as a deposit in said bank, from the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation, and said Frank Oleson then and there at all times well knowing that the said Scandinavian-American Bank, said banking institution, was then insolvent, and in failing circumstances, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the state of Washington.”

The undisputed evidence introduced on the part of the state shows, that the deposit alleged in the information *153was made for a partnership composed of H. C. Byron, Will Shumway and X. S. Byron, known as Byron & Shumway, by their bookkeeper, John U. Lloyd; that the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation, was not in existence at that time and never did any business with the said bank. The evidence also shows that all the partners in the firm of Byron & Shumway were the incorporators of the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation, which was organized some two or three weeks after the alleged deposit. The deposit slip, which was introduced in evidence, is as follows:

“Deposited by Byron & Shumway with the Scandinavian-Ameriean Bank, Xew Whatcom, Washington, February 27, 1901:
“Gold ..................... 70
“Silver................... 13
“Currency ............ 10
“Checks ................... 20
“113”

When the state had introduced this proof and rested, the appellant moved the court for an instructed verdict, upon the ground of a material variance. This motion was denied. There can be no doubt that this proof is a variance from the allegation, which charged the deposit to have been made by the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation, for the corporation is an entirely different and distinct person from Byron & Shumway, a copartnership. The rule is well settled that an information charging larceny from a particular person is not sustained by proof of larceny of the same property from another person, or from a person by another name, unless the names are idem sorums. Larceny and Kindred Offenses, by Rapalje, §§241, 242, and cases cited; State v. Van Cleve, 5 Wash. *154642, 32 Pac. 461. The fact that the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation, is the successor of Byron & Shumway, does not bring the two names within the rule of idem soncms, because they are, in fact and in law, two distinct and different persons, notwithstanding’ that the stockholders of the corporation may in fact be identical with the partners in a partnership which was the predecessor in interest of the property of the corporation. Respondent contends, however, that the variance is immaterial, by reason of the following provision of the code:

“When the crime involves the commission of or an attempt to commit a private injury, and is described with sufficient certainty in other respects to identify the act, an erroneous allegation as to the person injured or intended to be injured is not material.” §6846, Bal. Code.

And it is argued that, because the date and amount of the deposit are described with certainty, these facts are suffh cient to identify the act. The fact that the bank was insolvent or in failing circumstances at the time of the deposit is, no doubt, material, but the precise date of the deposit, so long as it was within the time when the bank was in failing circumstances, is not a material ingredient in the crime. § 6845, Bal. Code.

The question then is, do the facts that the bank was insolvent at a particular time, and that a deposit of $113 was made at that time, identify the act of such deposit with certainty. It seems clear that it does not do so. The first and most important inquiry to identify such an act would naturally be, who made the deposit ? Without this fact, a person charged might find upon his books different deposits for the same amount upon the same day. It would then be impossible to identify the act charged. Banks, as a rule, receive many deposits on the same day, and frequently, no doubt, in the same amount. *155The date and amount of a deposit are material to identify it, hut these items alone could not he relied upon to identify it with certainty. The name of the depositor is equally as important as either the date- or the amount, if not more so. All three of the items, particularly the amount and name of the depositor, are necessary to identify the deposit with certainty. The statute, therefore, does not apply to the facts in this case..

Furthermore, the facts in this case illustrate, as clearly as any that could he supposed, the danger of permitting misleading allegations intended to identify the act charged. The information alleges that the defendant, on February 27, 1901, knowing the bank to be insolvent, received and assented to the reception of “$113 as a deposit in said bank from the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation.” The pleader evidently supposed that the name of the depositor was necessary to an identification of-the deposit and, therefore, alleged that the deposit was made by the Byron Grocery Company, a corporation. The defendant, from his personal knowledge or from an examination of the books of the bank, knew that no such person had made a deposit in said bank, and had a right to rely upon this fact as a complete defense. He was certainly not required to prepare to meet some other accusation. This allega-, tion, even if immaterial, would have the effect to mislead the accused, because he had a right to suppose that the state would attempt to prove the charge as made. If the prosecution may be permitted to allege that the deposit was made by one person, and then, at the trial, prove that it was made by another and entirely different person, there is no virtue in the constitutional provision that an accused person shall have a right to know the nature and cause of the accusation against him. § 22, art. 1, of the constitution. ' And the state might, in prosecutions of this kind, *156entirely mislead accused persons by alleging that sucb deposits were made by one person, when they were in fact made by another. In the language of State v. Gifford, 19 Wash. 464, 53 Pac. 709, “we do not think it was the intention of the legislature, in the passage of this law, to set a trap for the feet of defendants.”

The appellant’s motion for a directed verdict should have been granted. The judgment is therefore reversed.

Fullerton, C. J., and Dunbar, Anders, and Hadley, JJ., concur.