<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>CHAPTER EIGHTEEN<br/> AN OLD NEWSPAPER</h2>
<p>As soon as Spargo unfolded the paper he saw what he wanted on the middle page,
headed in two lines of big capitals. He lighted a cigar and settled down to
read.</p>
<p class="center">
“MARKET MILCASTER QUARTER SESSIONS<br/>
“TRIAL OF JOHN MAITLAND</p>
<p>“The Quarter Sessions for the Borough of Market Milcaster were held on
Wednesday last, October 3rd, 1891, in the Town Hall, before the Recorder, Henry
John Campernowne, Esq., K.C., who was accompanied on the bench by the
Worshipful the Mayor of Market Milcaster (Alderman Pettiford), the Vicar of
Market Milcaster (the Rev. P.B. Clabberton, M.A., R.D.), Alderman Banks, J.P.,
Alderman Peters, J.P., Sir Gervais Racton, J.P., Colonel Fludgate, J.P.,
Captain Murrill, J.P., and other magistrates and gentlemen. There was a crowded
attendance of the public in anticipation of the trial of John Maitland,
ex-manager of the Market Milcaster Bank, and the reserved portions of the Court
were filled with the <i>élite</i> of the town and neighbourhood, including a
considerable number of ladies who manifested the greatest interest in the
proceedings.</p>
<p>“The Recorder, in charging the Grand Jury, said he regretted that the
very pleasant and gratifying experience which had been his upon the occasion of
his last two official visits to Market Milcaster—he referred to the fact
that on both those occasions his friend the Worshipful Mayor had been able to
present him with a pair of white gloves—was not to be repeated on the
present occasion. It would be their sad and regrettable lot to have before them
a fellow-townsman whose family had for generations occupied a foremost position
in the life of the borough. That fellow-townsman was charged with one of the
most serious offences known to a commercial nation like ours: the offence of
embezzling the moneys of the bank of which he had for many years been the
trusted manager, and with which he had been connected all his life since his
school days. He understood that the prisoner who would shortly be put before
the court on his trial was about to plead guilty, and there would accordingly
be no need for him to direct the gentlemen of the Grand Jury on this
matter—what he had to say respecting the gravity and even enormity of the
offence he would reserve. The Recorder then addressed himself to the Grand Jury
on the merits of two minor cases, which came before the court at a later period
of the morning, after which they retired, and having formally returned a true
bill against the prisoner, and a petty jury, chosen from well-known burgesses
of the town having been duly sworn.</p>
<p>“JOHN MAITLAND, aged 42, bank manager, of the Bank House, High Street,
Market Milcaster, was formally charged with embezzling, on April 23rd, 1891,
the sum of £4,875 10_s_. 6_d_., the moneys of his employers, the Market
Milcaster Banking Company Ltd., and converting the same to his own use. The
prisoner, who appeared to feel his position most acutely, and who looked very
pale and much worn, was represented by Mr. Charles Doolittle, the well-known
barrister of Kingshaven; Mr. Stephens, K.C., appeared on behalf of the
prosecution.</p>
<p>“Maitland, upon being charged, pleaded guilty.</p>
<p>“Mr. Stephens, K.C., addressing the Recorder, said that without any
desire to unduly press upon the prisoner, who, he ventured to think, had taken
a very wise course in pleading guilty to that particular count in the
indictment with which he stood charged, he felt bound, in the interests of
justice, to set forth to the Court some particulars of the defalcations which
had arisen through the prisoner’s much lamented dishonesty. He proposed
to offer a clear and succinct account of the matter. The prisoner, John
Maitland, was the last of an old Market Milcaster family—he was, in fact,
he believed, with the exception of his own infant son, the very last of the
race. His father had been manager of the bank before him. Maitland himself had
entered the service of the bank at the age of eighteen, when he left the local
Grammar School; he succeeded his father as manager at the age of thirty-two; he
had therefore occupied this highest position of trust for ten years. His
directors had the fullest confidence in him; they relied on his honesty and his
honour; they gave him discretionary powers such as no bank-manager, probably,
ever enjoyed or held before. In fact, he was so trusted that he was, to all
intents and purposes, the Market Milcaster Banking Company; in other words he
was allowed full control over everything, and given full licence to do what he
liked. Whether the directors were wise in extending such liberty to even the
most trusted servant, it was not for him (Mr. Stephens) to say; it was some
consolation, under the circumstances, to know that the loss would fall upon the
directors, inasmuch as they themselves held nearly the whole of the shares. But
he had to speak of the loss—of the serious defalcations which Maitland
had committed. The prisoner had wisely pleaded guilty to the first count of the
indictment. But there were no less than seventeen counts in the indictment. He
had pleaded guilty to embezzling a sum of £4,875 odd. But the total amount of
the defalcations, comprised in the seventeen counts, was no less—it
seemed a most amazing sum!—than £221,573 8_s_. 6_d_.! There was the
fact—the banking company had been robbed of over two hundred thousand
pounds by the prisoner in the dock before a mere accident, the most trifling
chance, had revealed to the astounded directors that he was robbing them at
all. And the most serious feature of the whole case was that not one penny of
this money had been, or ever could be, recovered. He believed that the
prisoner’s learned counsel was about to urge upon the Court that the
prisoner himself had been tricked and deceived by another man, unfortunately
not before the Court—a man, he understood, also well known in Market
Milcaster, who was now dead, and therefore could not be called, but whether he
was so tricked or deceived was no excuse for his clever and wholesale robbing
of his employers. He had thought it necessary to put these facts—which
would not be denied—before the Court, in order that it might be known how
heavy the defalcations really had been, and that they should be considered in
dealing with the prisoner.</p>
<p>“The Recorder asked if there was no possibility of recovering any part of
the vast sum concerned.</p>
<p>“Mr. Stephens replied that they were informed that there was not the
remotest chance—the money, it was said by prisoner and those acting on
his behalf, had utterly vanished with the death of the man to whom he had just
made reference.</p>
<p>“Mr. Doolittle, on behalf of the prisoner, craved to address a few words
to the Court in mitigation of sentence. He thanked Mr. Stephens for the
considerate and eminently dispassionate manner in which he had outlined the
main facts of the case. He had no desire to minimize the prisoner’s
guilt. But, on prisoner’s behalf, he desired to tell the true story as to
how these things came to be. Until as recently as three years previously the
prisoner had never made the slightest deviation from the straight path of
integrity. Unfortunately for him, and, he believed, for some others in Market
Milcaster, there came to the town three years before the present proceedings, a
man named Chamberlayne, who commenced business in the High Street as a
stock-and-share broker. A man of good address and the most plausible manners,
Chamberlayne attracted a good many people—amongst them his unfortunate
client. It was matter of common knowledge that Chamberlayne had induced
numerous persons in Market Milcaster to enter into financial transactions with
him; it was matter of common repute that those transactions had not always
turned out well for Chamberlayne’s clients. Unhappily for himself,
Maitland had great faith in Chamberlayne. He had begun to have transactions
with him in a large way; they had gone on and on in a large way until he was
involved to vast amounts. Believing thoroughly in Chamberlayne and his methods,
he had entrusted him with very large sums of money.</p>
<p>“The Recorder interrupted Mr. Doolittle at this point to ask if he was to
understand that Mr. Doolittle was referring to the prisoner’s own money.</p>
<p>“Mr. Doolittle replied that he was afraid the large sums he referred to
were the property of the bank. But the prisoner had such belief in Chamberlayne
that he firmly anticipated that all would be well, and that these sums would be
repaid, and that a vast profit would result from their use.</p>
<p>“The Recorder remarked that he supposed the prisoner intended to put the
profit into his own pockets.</p>
<p>“Mr. Doolittle said at any rate the prisoner assured him that of the two
hundred and twenty thousand pounds which was in question, Chamberlayne had had
the immediate handling of at least two hundred thousand, and he, the prisoner,
had not the ghost of a notion as to what Chamberlayne had done with it.
Unfortunately for everybody, for the bank, for some other people, and
especially for his unhappy client, Chamberlayne died, very suddenly, just as
these proceedings were instituted, and so far it had been absolutely impossible
to trace anything of the moneys concerned. He had died under mysterious
circumstances, and there was just as much mystery about his affairs.</p>
<p>“The Recorder observed that he was still waiting to hear what Mr.
Doolittle had to urge in mitigation of any sentence he, the Recorder, might
think fit to pass.</p>
<p>“Mr. Doolittle said that he would trouble the Court with as few remarks
as possible. All that he could urge on behalf of the unfortunate man in the
dock was that until three years ago he had borne a most exemplary character,
and had never committed a dishonest action. It had been his misfortune, his
folly, to allow a plausible man to persuade him to these acts of dishonesty.
That man had been called to another account, and the prisoner was left to bear
the consequences of his association with him. It seemed as if Chamberlayne had
made away with the money for his own purposes, and it might be that it would
yet be recovered. He would only ask the Court to remember the prisoner’s
antecedents and his previous good conduct, and to bear in mind that whatever
his near future might be he was, in a commercial sense, ruined for life.</p>
<p>“The Recorder, in passing sentence, said that he had not heard a single
word of valid excuse for Maitland’s conduct. Such dishonesty must be
punished in the most severe fashion, and the prisoner must go to penal
servitude for ten years.</p>
<p>“Maitland, who heard the sentence unmoved, was removed from the town
later in the day to the county jail at Saxchester.”</p>
<p>Spargo read all this swiftly; then went over it again, noting certain points in
it. At last he folded up the newspaper and turned to the house—to see old
Quarterpage beckoning to him from the library window.</p>
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