Court Opinion

ID: 6123908
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 20:15:36.840091+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:26.679815
License: Public Domain

Smith, J.:
By way of showing a motive for the alleged offense, the prosecuting attorney offered evidence tending to show that the defendant had forged the name, of Hoster to two promissory notes for $1,000, and $2,500, respectively, shortly before the alleged attempt to kill, which notes he had in his possession at the time when the offense was committed. The reception of this evidence is now urged as error, on the ground that it tended to prove an offense other than that charged in the indictment. That the desire to conceal the crime of forgery, if the defendant had perpetrated it, and to render the forged paper available, may have constituted a motive for attempting to put out of the way the man whose name was forged, is so probable, that the evidence cannot be said to be foreign to the issue; and it is well settled, that upon a trial for a felony, evidence tending to prove a motive for its commission is not inadmissible because it may incidentally show the accused to have been guilty of another offense. (People v. Wood, 3 Park. Or., 681; Stout v. People, 4 Id., 71; Pierson v. People, 18 Hun, *330239, affi’d in Ct. of App., January 13, 1880 ; Colemam v. People, 58 N. Y., 555.) Tlie objection that the evidence tended to show a distinct offense other than that charged, was properly overruled For the like reason the defendant’s motion to strike out the evidence referred to was properly denied. The defendant’s offer, with which he accompanied the motion, to admit that in case the jury should find that he committed the assault and battery on Iioster, lie intended to kill him, did not alter the case. The public prosecutor was under no obligation to accept the proffered admission and.waive the proof.
The district attorney put in evidence a promissory note on which was the genuine indorsement of the complainant. lie also produced and proved an account-book of the defendant, in which the latter had written, among other things, the complainant’s name, and the items of an account between the complainant and himself. The note and book were received without objection. Subsequently, witnesses called for the prosecution were allowed to compare the genuine indorsement of Iioster on the note with the two signatures alleged to have been forged, and to give an opinion, based on such comparison, as to the genuineness of the latter signature. This was not error. (Miles v. Loomis, 10 Hun, 372; S. C., affi’d., 75 N. Y., 288.) Nor was it error to pen nit a comparison of the same signatures with the handwriting of the defendant in the account-book, and in the body of the $1,000 note, which he testified was written by him. It was within the discretion of the court to allow particular marks of resemblance or dissimilarity, as the case might be, between the several pieces of handwriting, to be pointed out to the jury, and to allow the jury to take into their hands the writings proved in the case, and examine and compare them.
Much evidence was given by the prosecution tending to show that the defendant was embarrassed in his pecuniary circumstances, being pressed by numerous debts, which he was unable to pay, with a view of showing that he had' not money to lend. This testimony is now claimed by the prosecution to be pertinent, by reason of the testimony of the defendant,-that Iioster was indebted to him for borrowed money to more than the amount of the alleged forged notes, at the time they bore date, and that the notes were given in *331consideration of such, indebtedness. We are inclined to think that testimony tending to show the inability of the defendant to lend money was competent upon the question whether the notes for $1,000 and $2,500 were genuine or forged. It has been held that the presumption of payment, arising from the lapse of time, may be resisted by showing the obligor’s inability to pay; as his poverty, his insolvency, or a state approaching it. (1 Phil. Ev., 4 Am. ed., with C. & H. Notes, p. 677, note, and cases there cited; and see Nicholls v. Van Valkenburgh, 15 Hun, 230, and the cases there cited by Taícoit, P. J., and his comments on the case of Nicholson v. Waful, 70 N. Y., 604.). Our conclusion on this point is not formed without some hesitation, but, on the whole, we think that, in view of the conflict of testimony between the defendant and the complainant, as to the genuineness of the notes, and of the version of the defendant as to the consideration of the notes, and the circumstances under which they were executed, testimony as to the pecuniary condition of the defendant was not irrelevant. Several items of this class of testimony were objected to, on other and special grounds, in addition to that of irrelevancy, but, on examining them, we And no merit in them, and they do not call for further comment.
The testimony of the witness Strong, as to the remark made by the defendant respecting the signature of Hosier on the note given to him by the witness, was competent. It occurred on the Saturday night preceding the Monday on which the alleged assault took place, and as a circumstance tending to show that the defendant was particularly attentive to the characteristics of IToster’s signature it was competent evidence.
It is claimed by the defendant’s counsel that the prosecuting attorney was permitted, against the prisoner’s objection and exception, to cross-examine the defendant as to irrelevant matters, and then to contradict his answers, thus elicited, by other witnesses. This claim has reference particularly to the testimony of Jacob Bachman in respect to the Deshler note, and the chattel mortgage purporting to have been given to the witness by the defendant. But neither Bachman nor the defendant professed to have any positive recollection as to the matter referred to, and there was really no substantial contradiction between them.
*332The complainant was permitted to testify, against objection, that lie owned four hundred and fifty acres of land in Iowa. For aught that appears, the testimony was wholly irrelevant and was improperly received, but it is difficult to see how the admission of it harmed the defendant, and we think it does not furnish a ground for setting aside the conviction.
The testimony of the witness Green, in respect to the axe, tending to show that the defendant carried it in his sleigh for several days before the assault, and from which the jury might have inferred that he supposed he had it in his sleigh, and attempted to get hold of it, shortly before the assault was made, was competent upon the question of intent.
Some minor questions were raised by other exceptions, which are unimportant, and need no special remark. ¥e have examined them all attentively and are of the opinion that they involve no error.
The rulings of the court below upon the motion in arrest of judgment and the motion for a now trial are not before us for review. They are not brought up by the certiorari. That brings up only exceptions taken at the trial. (2 R. S., 736, § 21; Willis v. People, 32 N. Y., 722; Gaffney v. People, 50 Id., 425 ; Brotherton v. People, 75 Id., 159.)
The conviction should be affirmed and the proceedings remitted to the Seneca County Sessions, with instructions to proceed to sentence.
Talcott, P. J., and Hardin, J"., concurred.
Ordered accordingly.