Joanna I. Tabit
Special Assistant
Prosecuting Attorney
Office of the Attorney General
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for Appellant
Darrell W. Ringer
Patricia H. Stiller
Ringer, Cavender, Hansen
& Stiller
Morgantown, West Virginia
Counsel for Appellee
JUSTICE WORKMAN delivered the Opinion of the Court.
1. The crime of embezzlement by a public official, as that
offense is set forth in West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 (1989), is not
a specific intent crime.
2. While proof of intent to steal or misappropriate is not
required, proof that the public official intended to do the act or
acts that resulted in the embezzlement is necessary to convict a
public official of embezzlement pursuant to the second paragraph of
West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 (1989).
The State of West Virginia appeals from an order of the
Circuit Court of Marion County dismissing seventeen felony
embezzlement counts against the appellee, Jay Montgomery Brown, the
former prosecuting attorney of Marion County. The trial court
dismissed the felony embezzlement counts based on its determination
that embezzlement by a public official is a crime requiring proof
of specific intent. The circuit court ruled that the State's
failure to aver intent rendered the embezzlement counts fatally
defective. Having fully reviewed the facts of the case in
conjunction with the applicable statute, we reverse the circuit
court's finding that West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 (1989) requires
proof of specific intent to convict a public official of
embezzlement.
On August 31, 1990, a Marion County grand jury indicted Mr.
Brown on twenty-one counts, including seventeen felony embezzlement
counts. The indictments concerning embezzlement alleged that Mr.
Brown had unlawfully and feloniously misappropriated State or
county funds and converted them for his own use in violation of
West Virginia Code § 61-3-20.See footnote 1
Mr. Brown moved to dismiss the embezzlement counts on the
grounds that they failed to include any allegation of intent and
did not refer to the crime of embezzlement other than by a citation
to West Virginia Code § 61-3-20. In response to the motion to
dismiss, the State argued that intent is not an element of the
crime of embezzlement by a public official as that offense is
embodied in the second paragraph of West Virginia Code § 61-3-20.
With regard to Mr. Brown's claim that he was not properly apprised
of the embezzlement offenses, the State maintained that he had been
sufficiently informed of the offenses with which he had been
charged because the indictments made specific reference to the
statutory section he was accused of violating and substantially
tracked the applicable language of West Virginia Code § 61-3-20.
Following a hearing on Mr. Brown's motion to dismiss, the
trial court entered an order dated June 28, 1991, dismissing the
seventeen felony embezzlement counts for failure to allege intent.
It is from that order that the State now appeals.
This case presents an issue of first impression regarding
whether intent is an element of the crime of embezzlement by a
public official. The statute at issue, West Virginia Code § 61-3-20, provides in pertinent part as follows:
If any officer, agent, clerk or servant of this State, or of any county, district, school district, or municipal corporation, or of any banking institution, or other corporation, or any officer of public trust in this State, or any agent, clerk or servant of
any firm or person, or company or association
of persons not incorporated, embezzle or
fraudulently convert to his own use, bullion,
money, bank notes, drafts, security for money,
or any effects or property of any other
person, which shall have come into his
possession, or been placed under his care or
management, by virtue of his office, place or
employment, he shall be guilty of the larceny
thereof. If such guilty person be an officer,
agent, clerk or servant of any banking
institution, he shall be guilty of a felony,
and, upon conviction thereof, shall be
imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than
ten years. And it shall not be necessary to
describe in the indictment, or to identify
upon the trial, the particular bullion, money,
bank note, draft or security for money which
is so taken, converted to his own use, or
embezzled by him. . . .
And whenever any officer, agent, clerk or
servant of this State, or of any county,
district, school district, or municipal
corporation, shall appropriate or use for his
own benefit, or for the benefit of any other
person, any bullion, money, bank notes,
drafts, security for money, or funds,
belonging to this State or to any such county,
district, school district or municipal
corporation, he shall be held to have
embezzled the same, and be guilty of the
larceny thereof. In the prosecution of any
such officer, agent, clerk or servant of this
State or of any county, district, school
district, or municipal corporation, charged
with appropriation or use for his own benefit
or the benefit of any other person, any
bullion, money, bank notes, drafts, security
for money, or funds, belonging to this State
or to any county, district, school district or
municipal corporation, it shall not be
necessary to describe in the indictment, or to
identify upon the trial, the particular
bullion, money, bank notes, drafts, security
for money, or funds, appropriated or used for
his own benefit or for the benefit of any
other person. . . .
W. Va. Code § 61-3-20 (emphasis supplied).
We previously examined this state's embezzlement statute in
State ex rel. Cogar v. Kidd, 160 W. Va. 371, 234 S.E.2d 899 (1977).
At issue in Cogar was the constitutionality of the presumption of
guilt created by West Virginia Code § 61-3-20. Regarding those
presumptions we said:
Two unconstitutional presumptions are
contained in the statute. The reason there
are two presumptions is that the embezzlement
statute contains two separate embezzlement
offenses. Both presumptions were added to the
embezzlement statute by Chapter 18 of the 1903
Acts of the Legislature, when the statute was
substantially amended and a new substantive
crime, relating solely to embezzlement by
public officials, was added. This offense is
currently found in the first sentence of the
second paragraph of W. Va. Code, 61-3-20.
160 W. Va. at 373, 234 S.E.2d at 900-01 (emphasis supplied). Mr.
Brown's argument that only one type of embezzlement is delineated
in West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 is negated by this Court's
discussion in Cogar concerning the inclusion of two separate
offenses in the statute.See footnote 2 West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 clearly
provides for two separate embezzlement offenses: a general
embezzlement offense and a specific offense pertaining only to
public officials. See Cogar, 160 W. Va. at 373, 234 S.E.2d at 901.
That the Legislature intended two separate offenses is further
illustrated by contrasting the statutory language in the first
paragraph which defines the crime of embezzlement in general to the
second paragraph which defines a specific type of embezzlement--one
that is perpetrated by a public official. The operative language
in the first paragraph of West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 is "embezzle
or fraudulently convert to his own use," whereas the second
paragraph which pertains specifically to public officials requires
only that the individual "appropriate or use for his own benefit,
or for the benefit of any other person."
Mr. Brown vehemently argues that the crime of embezzlement, as that offense is defined in West Virginia Code § 61-3-20, includes the element of criminal intent to permanently deprive an owner of the use of his property. The recognized definition of embezzlement in its general sense admittedly involves the element of intent to
deprive an owner of the use of entrusted property. See Syl. Pt. 2,
State v. Moyer, 58 W. Va. 146, 52 S.E. 30 (1905).See footnote 3 But, as we have
previously noted,
the crime of embezzlement by a public official
does not contain as many elements of proof as
the general embezzlement crime. It is
generally recognized that the Legislature may
set higher standards on public officials by
defining embezzlement by public officials
without all of the elements found in the
general embezzlement statutes.
Cogar, 160 W. Va. at 375, 234 S.E.2d at 901, n.4 (emphasis
supplied). Moreover, it is well-established that the intent
element of embezzlement is often watered down when the crime
involves public officials. See 2 Wayne R. LaFave & Austin W.
Scott, Jr., Substantive Criminal Law § 8.6(g) (1986); see also 3
Charles E. Torcia, Wharton's Criminal Law § 414 (14th ed. 1980).
The simple explanation for reducing or eliminating the intent
element of embezzlement where the crime is committed by a public
official is the fact that public officials are not as closely
monitored by their employer, the public, as employees in the
general sector. See LaFave & Scott, supra at § 8.6(g). As the
State posits, because misuse of public funds is a matter of the
general public welfare, it is entirely appropriate to hold public
officers to an exacting standard of conduct and that standard may,
if the Legislature so chooses, eliminate the element of intent
necessary to prosecute a non-public official. See Cogar, 160 W.
Va. at 375, 234 S.E.2d at 901, n.4.
While Mr. Brown does not dispute the legislative prerogative to dispense with the element of intent in a statutory crime, he maintains that the Legislature's decision to eliminate the intent element must be "clearly expressed." State v. Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co. of America, 111 W. Va. 148, 150, 161 S.E. 5 (1931). The State argues, and we agree, that the intention of the Legislature to eliminate intent as an element pertaining to the crime of embezzlement by a public official is demonstrated by the glaringly different language which describes the acts required to constitute an embezzlement. Noticeably absent in the second paragraph of West Virginia Code § 61-3-20 is the requirement that the accused "embezzle or fraudulently convert to his own use." The Legislature obviously intended to create a higher standard for a public official by merely requiring such an individual to "appropriate or
use for his own benefit, or for the benefit of any other person" to
be guilty of embezzlement. Had the Legislature intended to hold
public officials to the same standard as non-public officials, we
believe that the operative language of the second paragraph of West
Virginia Code § 61-3-20 would parallel that of the first paragraph.
Contrary to Mr. Brown's advancements, this Court believes that the
Legislature has "clearly expressed" its decision to hold public
officials to a higher standard by the noticeable choice of
different terms describing the acts necessary to constitute
embezzlement under each of the two separate offenses described in
West Virginia Code § 61-3-20. We further recognize that the
Legislature has acted within its constitutional limitations by
defining embezzlement to include the acts of misuse or
misapplication of public funds by a public official. See Cogar,
160 W. Va. at 375-76, 234 S.E.2d at 902.
Having decided that the crime of embezzlement by a public official, as that offense is set forth in West Virginia Code § 61-3-20, is not a specific intentSee footnote 4 crime, the next question that
arises is what degree of mens rea is necessary to convict a public
official under our embezzlement statute. The Supreme Court of
Nebraska adjudicated this very issue in Haines v. State, 170 Neb.
304, 102 N.W.2d 609 (1960). The defendant in Haines, a justice of
the peace, argued that the information charging him with
embezzlement of fines collected by him in his official capacity was
defective because it did not charge him with intent to defraud the
State of Nebraska or Buffalo County. See 102 N.W.2d at 614. The
statute at issue in Haines provided, in relevant part, that when:
'any officer . . . charged with the
collection, receipt, safekeeping, transfer or
disbursement of the public money, . . .
belonging to the state or to any county . . .
shall convert to his own use, or the use of
any other person
. . . in any way whatever, . . . any portion
of the public money . . . received, controlled
or held by him for safekeeping, transfer or
disbursement, . . . every such act shall be
deemed and held in law to be an embezzlement
. . . .'
Id. (quoting Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-543 (1943)). In addressing the
degree of intent necessary to convict a public official for
embezzlement, the Haines court noted that:
'[i]f a statute makes it a felony for a public officer knowingly and unlawfully to appropriate to his own use or to the use of any other person money received by him in his official capacity, it is not necessary, to constitute the offense of embezzlement, that there be an intent to appropriate the money so as forever to exclude the rightful owner from its use and possession. The purpose of the statute is to prevent any public official from
using the money or property coming to him in
his official capacity for any purpose other
than the one for which the money or property
was intrusted to him.'
102 N.W.2d at 615 (quoting 18 Am. Jur. Embezzlement § 40 at 597
(1938) and emphasis supplied).
The Haines court reasoned that if a public official "'does knowingly use it (money or property coming to him in his official capacity), or permit others to do so, for other purposes than the one for which it was intrusted to him, then he comes within the provisions of the statute.'" 102 N.W.2d at 615 (quoting People v. Warren, 122 Mich. 504, 81 N.W. 360, 367 (1899)). Recognizing that "'under some statutes, especially those relating to the embezzlement of public funds, the offense consists in the violation of the statute and not the intent or motive by which the accused is actuated,'" the court ruled in Haines that the offense of embezzlement "consists in . . . violation of the statute (use of public money for any purpose other than the one for which the money was entrusted to the official), whether or not the public official fraudulently intended to do so." 102 N.W.2d at 615-16 (quoting 29 C.J.S. Embezzlement § 12 at 687); see also State v. Williams, 188 Neb. 565, 198 N.W.2d 187, 188 (1972) (noting that fraudulent intent is not an essential element of the offense of embezzlement by a public official); Landrum v. State, 60 Okla. Crim. 259, 63 P.2d 994, 997 (1936) (criminal intent not element of crime of embezzlement by public official because "such intent was presumed
when funds held in trust by a county treasurer by virtue of his
office, were applied other than as permitted by law.").
Although we conclude that the crime of embezzlement by a
public official is not a specific intent crime, the intentSee footnote 5 to
commit the act or acts that results in the misappropriation or
misuse is still necessary to convict a public official under the
second paragraph of West Virginia Code § 61-3-20. See Webb v.
Superior Court, 202 Cal. App.3d 872, 248 Cal. Rptr. 911, 918,
(1988) (citing People v. Dillon, 199 Cal. 1, 248 P. 230 (1926)).
As the Dillon court explained, statutes like West Virginia Code §
61-3-20 which define embezzlement by public officials as the mere
use of public funds contrary to authorization do not require
specific intent, only the intentional commission of the act which
constitutes a forbidden use of the funds. See 248 P. at 232.
Expounding on the legislative prerogative to eliminate intent and
the rationale underlying statutes in which this prerogative is
invoked, the Dillon court stated:
No one will deny the power or right of the Legislature to provide that embezzlement of public moneys is committed by a public officer when he uses public funds in a manner forbidden by law, even though he may have no fraudulent intent when he does so. To render a person guilty of crime it is not essential to a conviction that the proof should show such person to have entertained any intent to
violate law. . . . It is sufficient that he
intentionally committed the forbidden
act....
. . . [T]here must be an intent to do the
forbidden thing or commit the interdicted act.
It furnishes no basis for the claim that there
must exist in the mind of the transgressor a
specific purpose or intent to violate law. If
it were so, innumerable statutes would be
rendered ineffectual.
Id. (citations omitted).
Imposing the requirement that the public official must have
intended to commit the act which constitutes a violation of West
Virginia Code § 61-3-20 should eliminate Mr. Brown's concern that
an unintentional expenditure of public funds by a public official
would amount to embezzlement since the statute makes the mere "use"
of such funds a crime. If in fact a mistaken and unintentional
expenditure was committed, the public official could not be found
to have committed the violative act with the requisite intent
necessary to find him or her guilty of embezzlement. Accordingly,
we rule that while proof of intent to steal or misappropriate is
not required, proof that the public official intended to do the act
or acts that resulted in the embezzlement is necessary to convict
a public official of embezzlement pursuant to the second paragraph
of West Virginia Code § 61-3-20.
Based on the foregoing opinion, the decision of the Circuit Court
of Marion County is hereby reversed and the circuit court is
directed to reinstate the dismissed indictments.
(1) the trust relation of a person charged,
and that he falls within that class of persons
named; (2) that the property or thing claimed
to have been embezzled or converted is such
property as is embraced in the statute; (3)
that it is the property of another person; (4)
that it came into the possession, or was
placed in the care, of the accused, under and
by virtue of his office, place or employment;
(5) that his manner of dealing with or
disposing of the property, constituted a
fraudulent conversion and an appropriation of
the same to his own use, and (6) that the
conversion of the property to his own use was
with the intent to deprive the owner thereof.
Syl. Pt. 2, 58 W. Va. 146, 52 S.E. 30.
specific intent crime because proof that the public official intended to deprive the public of its property is not required.