Fairleigh v. Commonwealth

Opinion by

Judge Hargis :

The indictment charges Fairleigh with the crime of ■ embezzlement, which he is alleged to have committed substantially in the following manner: “That being in the employ and a servant of the *593Adams Express Co., as such he was entrusted with its money and feloniously converted to his own use fifty dollars thereof which he had received in his capacity as agent, from R. H. Paynter.”

James D. Jones, for appellant. P. W. Hardin, for appellee. [Cited, Commonwealth v. Barney, 115 Ky. 475, 24 Ky. L. 2352, 74 S. W. 181.]

To the indictment a demurrer was filed by appellant and overruled by the court. The demurrer should have been sustained because the offense of embezzlement from the class of persons to which the express company belongs or of which it is composed is purely statutory, and denounced by Gen. Stat. 1883, ch. 29, art. 12, §§ 1 and 2, and neither of those sections authorizes a conviction on such allegations as this indictment contains.

The first section applies to embezzlement from any incorporated company, but the indictment fails to aver, either by fact or inference, that the Adams Express Co. is an incorporated company by the laws of this or any other state and as such permitted to transact business in this state. The second section, as has been held, applies to any carrier, porter or other person to whom property has been delivered or intrusted and who shall fraudulently convert it to his own use or secrete it with intent to do so, before delivery thereof at the place where or to the person to whom delivery was to be made. The indictment- is not good under this section because it fails to allege that the money was delivered or entrusted to appellant to be delivered at any place or to any person, and that he fraudulently converted or secreted it for that purpose before he made the delivery.

Wherefore the judgment of conviction is reversed and cause remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer and quash the indictment.