Court Opinion

ID: 3972025
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:30:33.44937+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:17:52.208020
License: Public Domain

Appellant was convicted of forgery and assessed the lowest punishment.
The indictment, after the preliminary necessary allegations alleged: That appellant on or about April 29, 1915, in said county, "did then and there, without lawful authority, and with intent to injure and defraud, wilfully and fraudulently make a certain false instrument in writing, purporting to be the act of another, towit, purporting to be the act of Eliza Matthews, which said false instrument is to the tenor as follows:
"`Mr. Fout let this girl have 4 yards of Pink Sateen and 2 1/2 yard of Pink Valing her name is Veola Rhodes. Charge it to Eliza Matthews.'
"On the back of said instrument were the following words:
"`Tim Rhodes Da'
"In the above instrument the words `Mr. Fout' were intended to mean, and did mean, W.C. Fouts, who is a salesman at the store of Tucker-Hayter and Company, Nacogdoches, Texas. In the above set forth instrument the name `Eliza Matthews' was intended for, and did mean, Eliza Matthews."
This indictment is in strict accordance with the form therefor laid down by Judge White in his Ann. C.C.P., section 882, and also with Judge Willson's form in his Criminal Forms (4th ed.), No. 410, p. 215, and is clearly sufficient.
Appellant attacks by a motion in arrest of judgment said indictment on several grounds; one, because it did not allege that said instrument would have created, diminished, discharged or defeated any pecuniary obligation or in any way affected any property belonging to the purported maker, Eliza Matthews, if same had been true. In this character of instrument such allegation is unnecessary and has been *Page 6 
held to be so by many decisions of this court. Davis v. State,70 Tex. Crim. 253, and authorities therein cited; Horton v. State, 32 Tex. 80; Labbaite v. State, 6 Texas Crim. App., 257; Morris v. State, 17 Texas Crim. App., 660; Dooley v. State, 21 Texas Crim. App., 549; arts. 454 and 807, C.C.P.
The instrument clearly, on its face, was neither vague nor uncertain, and especially when taken in connection with the explanatory averments, and showed clearly that the order to furnish the goods called for was to Mr. W.C. Fouts, a salesman at the store of Tucker-Hayter and Company, which was all that was necessary in that regard; nor was it necessary for the indictment to allege that said Fouts himself had goods for sale or that he was empowered to furnish said goods from the stock of Tucker-Hayter and Company. Keeler v. State, 15 Texas Crim. App., 111; Spicer v. State, 52 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Hendricks v. State, 26 Texas Crim. App., 176; Rubio v. State, 50 Tex. Crim. 177. In order to constitute forgery of an instrument such as in this instance, it is not necessary that the party to whom the order is directed shall accept it or comply with it or be able to do so. To constitute forgery it is not necessary that it be successful to the extent of having procured the goods thereby ordered. Reeseman v. State, 59 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Rubio v. State, supra.
Neither was it necessary for the indictment to allege whether Tucker-Hayter and Company was a firm, partnership or corporation. It was not their names which were alleged to be forged. Lamb-Campbell v. State, 72 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Lucas v. State, 39 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Webb v. State, 39 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Usher v. State, 47 Tex.Crim. Rep.; Reeseman v. State, supra. As stated above, the said indictment with the explanatory averments made is clearly sufficient under the statute and the authorities.
Before the trial began, appellant's grandmother made for her, and she filed, an affidavit alleging that she was a female under eighteen years of age, towit, that she was a female fourteen years of age, and she sought to have the court dismiss the case against her and sought to be tried as a juvenile only. The court, on the motion of the State, struck out said affidavit and refused to consider it on two grounds: One that this was not a proceeding in a juvenile court against a delinquent child but a regular proceeding under an indictment for a felony; and the other, because the law makes no provision for such indictment being dismissed in the case of a female; that that law only applied to male defendants.
We have had under careful consideration the said juvenile and delinquent child acts of the Legislature in the recent cases of McCallen v. State, 76 Tex.Crim. Rep., 174 S.W. Rep., 611, and Ex parte Bartee, 76 Tex.Crim. Rep., 174 S.W. Rep., 1051, and we therein fully discussed the said laws and the effect thereof. We there held that, even in a prosecution of a male under seventeen years of age for a felony, that the said laws did not make it compulsory for the district judge to dismiss such felony charge and have the party proceeded *Page 7 
against under the juvenile Act, but that the court had the power and authority in such case of felony to proceed to the trial regularly as if the party was an adult male. And that, in misdemeanor cases, the court had the same power and authority, but that, in such misdemeanor case, it was necessary to at first enter an order to the effect that the party should be prosecuted as an ordinary criminal and not a juvenile. We think it wholly unnecessary to discuss these questions again. We have no doubt that we reached the correct conclusion in those cases.
We know of no law authorizing or requiring that a female under eighteen years of age and above thirteen years of age can not be prosecuted for any felony or that the district judge is either authorized or required to dismiss a felony indictment against a female and have her tried as a delinquent child or as a juvenile can be when a male under seventeen years of age. We know of no law which has provided a place of imprisonment other than the penitentiary for females who are prosecuted under the age of eighteen years like the Gatesville institution has been provided for males under seventeen years of age. The necessity for such a law has never arisen so far as we know. At least, there is no such law.
The evidence was clearly sufficient to authorize the verdict. The testimony of the appellant herself would have been sufficient for this. Appellant's special peremptory charge to acquit was properly refused by the trial judge; and so was his charge No. 2, even if the record should show that either was presented in such a way and in such a time as to require this court to consider them.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
DAVIDSON, JUDGE, not present at consultation.