1. Presump-’ tion as to formjury1 °f grand I. When it appears by the record that '111 a grand jury made up of sixteen persons named was duly empaneled, it will be presumed, in the absence of a contrary showing, that persons not named in the panel but who were selected by the jury commissioners and summoned by the-sheriff to serve as grand jurors were excused from such service by the court; and it will be further presumed, unless the contrary appears, that the court excused such persons for good and sufficient reasons. We conclude that the-motion to set aside the indictment was properly overruled.
II. The controlling question in the case arises upon the construction of section 1640, Mansf. Dig., which defines the crime of embezzlement by carriers and other bailees.
The section referred to reads as follows : “ If any carrier or other bailee shall embezzle, or convert to his own use, or make way with, or secrete with intent to embezzle, or convert to his own use, any money, goods, rights in action; property, effects or valuable security, which shall have come to his possession, or have been delivered to him, or placed under his care or custody, such bailee, although he-shall not break any trunk, package,, box or other thing in-which he received them, shall be deemed guilty of larceny, and on conviction shall be punished as in cases of larceny.”'
Does the statute cover the case of an attorney employed by the Attorney General of the State, under the provisions-of the act of March 31, 1885, to collect demands due to the school fund arising from the sale of sixteenth section lands? This act provides that attorneys employed under its provisions may retain as fees for collection 10 per cent, of the gross amount collected by them, and that “ the remainder of said gross amount, after deducting their fees as above provided for, shall be by said attorneys transmitted without delay to the Treasurer of State.” Acts 1885, p. 167, sec. 12.
It is contended that although the. defendant may have converted moneys collected by him as an attorney employed under the provisions of this act, he is not indictable under the statute defining embezzlement. Three grounds are alleged in support of this contention, as follows: 1st. That the statute applies only to carriers and bailees of the same generic kind as carriers; 2nd. That upon the collection of the money it became the property of the defendant, and he became the debtor of the school fund—in other words, that the relation of creditor and debtor, and not that of bailor and bailee, arose ; 3d. That if the entire amount collected did not become the property of the defendant, he became the owner of an undivided one-tenth part thereof, and in respect thereto could not commit the crime of embezzlement. We will proceed to consider the sufficiency of the grounds relied upon in the order above stated.
2. Embezzl - ment by bailse (1). It is insisted that the rule ejusdem generis restricts the meaning of the term “ other bailee” to the generic class “carrier.” The rule invoked is by no means of universal application, and its use is to carry out, not to defeat, the legislative intent. Where an act attempts to enumerate the several species of a generic class, and follows the enumera-, tion by a general term more comprehensive than the class, the act will be restrained in its operation because it is discerned that the legislature so intended ; but where the detailed enumeration embraces all the things capable of being classed as of their kind, and general words are added, they must be applied to things of a different kind from those enumerated. For the rule does not require the entire rejec-
tion of general words, and is to be used in harmony with the •elemental canon of construction, that no word is to be treated as unmeaning if a construction can be found that will preserve it and make it effectual. End. Int. Stat., secs. 23, 410-14. If the legislature, in the statute under consideration, had undertaken to detail the different kinds of carriers, and had followed the enumeration with the general words “ and other bailees,” its purpose might reasonably be implied to include such bailees only as belonged to the class carriers, and had been omitted in the enumeration ; . but having employed the generic term “ carriers ” and thus included all carriers of every kind, it must have intended, in adding the broader term, to embrace within the act something more than carriers. Otherwise the addition was without purpose, and the term added without meaning. The statute under consideration is a part of the revised statutes of 1838, and is a substantial transcript of a Missouri statute which was construed by the Supreme Court of that State before its adoption in this State._ The same rule was invoked there as here to restrain the operation of the general words ; but the court said : “ In our opinion, the legislature intended to make it larceny in all bailees to embezzle and convert goods,” etc. Norton v. State, 4 Mo., 461. The Court of Appeals of that State, an intermediate tribunal but one of great learning, subsequently approved this construction of the act. State v. Broderick, 7 Mo. App., 19. In a later case the Supreme Court of that State expressed a different view of the statute, but this was done without any discussion of the ■question or even a reference to the earlier decisions. State v. Grisham, 90 Mo., 163. If it is to be presumed that the law-makers here, in adopting the act of a sister State, intended to adopt the construction put upon it by the highest courts •of that State, the presumption would extend only to the ■construction given prior to its adoption here. End. Int. Stat., sec. 371. Looking to its construction there preceding its adoption here, we find the rule ejusdem generis not applied, because it would destroy parts of the act. In Dot■son’s case, decided in this court, the rule was not invoked, but the act was construed and a broader meaning given it than the rule would admit of. Dotson v. State, 51 Ark., 119. Upon consideration we are constrained to adopt the construction first put upon the act in Missouri. That ■does not extend the natural import of the terms employed, ■or enlarge the scope of the act by construction; but accords to these terms their ordinary signification, and declines to restrict their operation.
s. wht An attoris a bailee (2). Having determined that the act applies to other bailees as well as to carriers, we are next called to decide whether the defendant, by reason of collecting money due the school ■fund, occupied toward the school fund the relation of debtor •or that of bailee. As before stated; the act under which he was employed provides that the attorney may deduct 10 per ■cent, of the gross amount collected for his fees, and that he shall without delay transmit the remainder to the State Treasurer. The natural signification of this provision is that he may take a parr of the collection in satisfaction of his fees, and that he shall deliver the remaining part to the Treasurer. There is no implication in the act that he shall receive and appropriate the money, and upon subsequent ■settlement pay the amount found due ; the express provision ■excludes such implication. The act permits him to segregate a part from the whole and appropriate it; upon segregation the part becomes his, while the remainder belongs to the school fund. The express permission to appropriate a part is an implied prohibition against appropriating the remainder. If by the act it all became his, why provide that he could deduct and appropriate a part? The act, in requiring that he transmit the remainder after deducting his commission, leaves no room for construction ; it in express terms imposes the duty of delivering such remainder; and as such was his duty, he was a bailee, as defined in Dotson v. State, 51 Ark., supra, and not a debtor. If he had made a general assignment while it was in his custody, can it be ■contended that it would have passed to his assignee ? Or if his creditors had proceeded against him for a discovery of his assets, can it be that he would have been required to discover and surrender it in satisfaction of their demands ?■ Now he either held it for himself or for his client; if for himself, it was subject to all the incidents and burdens of private property; if for his client, it was for the purpose of’ delivery only. That was his only duty in reference to it,, for he was not authorized to lend, invest or otherwise dispose of it. Attorneys are usually selected with reference to their ability and fidelity; but if moneys collected by them are liable for their individual demands, their solvency becomes quite as important a consideration as their skill and integrity. But we do not think the defendant’s creditors could have asserted the right to apply the funds collected by him to their demands. Although in his custody, it was held by him as the property of the school fund; and so long as he held it, the owner could have asserted its ownership and the' right of possession as an incident thereof.
But it may be said that he could lawfully have converted the money into exchange for the purpose of transmission, and that, as this is true, it was not. his duty to transmit the-specific money. If the premise be conceded, the conclusion does not follow. It would only follow that there could be a substantive performance of the duty by means of a substituted delivery where a specific delivery was impracticable. Until the money was converted into exchange for' transmission, he would hold it under the duty arising by his employment; and after such conversion, if authorized, the same duty would arise as to the exchange. The right of property in the money, or substitute for it, would be in the school fund. Authority to change its form for purposes of transmission would not authorize its conversion to his own use or for any other purpose. There is nothing in the act which implies an intent to credit him, and he could not, without the consent of his client, create the relation of' creditor and debtor. That is a relation which should arise only by consent of both parties. Bankers and perhaps-persons engaged in other pursuits conduct their business with money deposited, and the right to use such deposits is-implied from the character of their pursuits. In such cases the right of use carries the right of property, and the relation of debtor and creditor springs from the deposit. But a deposit of money creates the relation of debtor and creditor, and passes the right of property in the money only when it is made with the understanding, express or implied, that a right of use goes with the deposit. Such is not the case with money collected by an attorney at law; it is not part of his business to use the money of his client; he collects it for the sole purpose of transmission.
This court has twice decided that an attorney, as to money-collected, was the agent of his client. Palmer v. Ashley, 3 Ark., 75 ; Cummins v. McLain, 2 Ark., 413. If he is the agent, he is not a debtor. He cannot at the same time occupy both relations with reference to the same collection. And as it is settled that he is an agent, the scope and purpose of' his agency are easily determined. His only duty is to hold the money until he can make a delivery of it. The client can demand delivery at any time after the collection ; and as such is his right, the duty of the attorney to make delivery follows.
The relation of an attorney to his client is the same whether he collects money or receives other property in the course of his employment. If he should receive for his client securities, jewels or other chattels, would it be contended that the property in them passed to him, and that he became bound to pay his client their value ? He has' the same rights and the same duties with reference to them ás with reference to money; and if money becomes his by collection, they become his if received into his possession. True, if before a felonious conversion he pay over an equal amount of other money, there is no violation of the criminal law because there is no felonious intent, and there is no civil liability because there is no damage. But the fact that an attorney may thus avoid criminal and civil responsibility, does not change his attitude towards his client. It is held by some courts, for whose opinions we entertain the highest regard, that an attorney cannot commit embezzlement as to moneys collected by him; and the reason assigned is that he is but the debtor to his client. Commonwealth v. Libbey, n Met., 64. As the reason embodies a principle in conflict with the decisions of this court above cited, the conclusion can have no controlling influence with us.
4. Embezzlement by a collecting at tor-(3). We do not think the defendant had an undivided interest in the collection. The collection belonged to the school fund, and he had a claim against it for his fees. The act under which he was employed made the amount of the collection the basis for fixing the amount of his fees, but did not transfer to him a property interest therein, nor convert an agency into a tenancy in common. He had the right to segregate one-tenth part from the whole of the collection and to appropriate that part, but until such segregation the whole belonged to the school fund. People v. Converse, 74 Mich., 478 ; State v. Shadd, 80 Mo., 358; Territory v. Meyer, 24 Pac. Rep., 183; Rex v. Hartley, R. & R., 139.
It follows from the views expressed that an attorney employed to collect demands due to the school fund is a bailee within the meaning of the act.
5, Necessity of demand. III. It is further insisted that the defendant is entitled to a new trial because there is no proof that a demand had been made upon him for the money. It is necessary to allege and prove a demand only where the statute makes it an element of the crime. As the statute under consideration does not make a demand such an element, no demand was necessary. The crime charged was not a failure to pay over the money on demand, but simply a felonious conversion. If the defendant had thus converted the money, his crime was complete, and his response to a demand could not have absolved him; if he had not thus converted it, he was not guilty.
6. Venue. IV. It is further insisted that there is no proof that the money was embezzled in Scott county. The defendant resided in that county and collected the money there. The last time it was seen, it was in his custody in that county. As venue may be proved by circumstances, we think the jury were warranted in finding that the conversion occurred in that county.
7. Description of money-V. The indictment charges the conversion of a sum of money comprising greenbacks, gold certificates, silver certificates and national bank notes. It was proved that the defendant collected a large sum, that it was in paper money, and that it was of one or other of the four kinds of bills described in the indictment. If it was either or all, it came within the charge, and we think the proof on that point sufficient.
VI. It could serve no purpose to set out the proof. We think it supports the verdict rendered. We find no error in the record, and the judgment will be affirmed.