Court Opinion

ID: 8296280
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 11:07:44.005741+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:44:05.230345
License: Public Domain

Turney, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The prisoner was indicted in the Criminal Court of Montgomery county, under sec. 4701 of the Code, which is as follows, viz.:
“Every person who, by any false pretense or by any false token or counterfeit letter, with intent to defraud another, obtains from any person any personal property, or the signature of any person to any written instrument, the false making of which is a forgery, shall on conviction be imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than three nor more than ten years.”
This indictment avers that the prisoner, unlawfully, falsely and fraudulently represented himself to John F. Coots, senior member of the firm of John F. Coots & Son, to be one W. S. Hardy, member of the firm of Hardy, Mott & Co., dealers in the city of New York, etc., etc., and by such representation induced John F. *31Coots to sign the firm name of John F. Coots & Son as endorser upon a draft for fifty dollars; that the draft was presented to the First National Bank at Clarksville and paid upon the faith of said endorsement; that by reason of the fraud, &c., Coots & Son were compelled to pay to the bank, etc.
The indictment further avers that the prisoner, by means of these false pretenses, obtained the endorsement of John F. Coots & Son, and was thereby enabled to get the draft cashed in bank, &c.
The proof fully sustains the indictment in every particular. No objection was made to the indictment.
Objection is taken in this Court for the first time to the manner of the selection and appointment of the grand jury. "We have repeatedly held, and several times at the present term, that such objection can only be had by plea in abatement.
It is objected that the indictment is for the offense of obtaining by false pretense the signature or endorsement of Coots & Son, and that the verdict of the jury is, “they find the defendant guilty of obtaining money under false pretense, as charged in the indictment,” etc.; that this verdict is neither responsive to the indictment nor to the charge of the court, his Honor having charged the jury: “Proof that the draft in question was cashed by the First National Bank is of no consequence in this case, and is mere surplus-age, and will not be considered by the jury. The charge against the defendant in the indictment is obtaining the signature of John F. Coots & Son to the draft by using the firm name. This offense was com-*32píete as soon as the signature of the firm name was thus obtained, if the proof satisfies your minds that it was so obtained. It is wholly immaterial whether money was or was not obtained afterward upon the faith of this signature.”
It is insisted that under this state of the record, and the fact apparent therefrom that court and counsel considered the prosecution as for the fraudulent obtention of the signature, and so treated and conducted the case, that therefore the verdict is void.
In examining this record, and looking to the plain and very explicit language of the charge as we have quoted it above, there can, it seems to us, be no doubt that the jury understood the offense complained of exactly as the court and attorneys understood it. In this view the objection taken presents the question, Hid the jury mean by its verdict to ignore the offense charged, and return a verdict of guilty of another ? We think not. The language of the record is, “They, (the jury) find the defendant guilty of obtaining money under false pretense, as charged in the indictment.” How charged in the indictment? Why, by false pretenses inducing the prosecutor to endorse the draft. If the case is cleared of this false pretense,_ then no crime has been committed. No fraud has been practiced upon any other than the prosecutor. No other person’s signature has been fraudulently obtained. No other person has parted with personal property because of the fraud, and upon no other person has a forgery been passed, and no other “false pretense” is “charged in the indictment.” So that it must necessarily and *33of course follow, that the jury in the use of the term “false pretense as charged in the indictment,” had reference to the false pretense practiced upon Coots, the only false pretense laid in the indictment. The language cannot by any possible construction have reference to anything else.
If the redundant language “obtaining money” used by the jury is to be held to mean anything, that meaning simply is, that the offense charged, as well as the result stated of obtaining the money are true; and such finding is not only substantially but literally supported and sustained by the entire record.
The statute requires that the act shall be perpetrated with intent to defraud, etc. The jury has found that the prisoner by his act did defraud Coots by obtaining money upon the faith of his signature, and that by so obtaining it he compelled Coots to repay to the bank the amount obtained. It was necessary to show by positive or circumstantial evidence the intent; and to - do this, the fact that the party obtained may be shown, as was done here. So that the verdict is not merely as it might have been, “guilty as charged,” but it goes further and finds upon the proof the consummation of the fraudulent intent in the actual obtention of the money.
If the entry of the finding of the jury had been in the usual form in such cases, viz.: “guilty in manner and form as charged in the indictment,” we presume no question would have been made upon it, yet such finding would have been substantially the one had in this case. For, after, averring facts necessary to the *34•offense of fraudulently obtaining the signature, tbe indictment concludes, “And the grand jurors present that the said C. W. Wallace in manner and form, and at the time and place aforesaid, did by false and fraudulent pretenses, obtain the endorsement of said John F. Coots & Son, by means of which he, the said C. W. Wallace, was enabled to get the same cashed in bank,” etc. So that the verdict is responsive to the indictment and the proof.
The charge of his Honor was correct — the offense was complete upon the making of the endorsement by Coots. Being complete, we are unable to see how it is avoided by a consummation of the purpose of the prisoner to procure money upon the faith of his felony.
We are certain the indictment was solely for fraudulently obtaining the signature; that the prisoner was put upon his trial for that offense alone; that he was prosecuted and defended for nothing else; that the court charged upon n'o ' other offense, and that -the jury could not be mistaken as to the matter they had to try. Therefore, so much of. the language of the verdict as recorded as refers to obtaining money under false pretenses, is surplusage, and may be rejected as such, in not being responsive to the indictment, the proof, the the charge of the court, nor to the only issue to be tried.
So far as we can learn by the record, objection to the verdict is taken for the first time. at the trial in this court, and now it is sought to put the criminal court in error without that court having liad the opportunity to correct or explain — when, if the question *35had been made, there can be no doubt an entry formally proper would have been made.
Seeing the consequence now attached to the irregularity, and appreciating the earnestness with which it is pressed upon us, we feel safe in concluding that if it was in the knowledge of the prisoner or his counsel while the record was in the control of the court below, there was nothing of avail to the prisoner in it, and it was purposely passed over.
Giving to the language of the verdict its natural and pertinent signification, as suggested by every part of the record, and wrong is done to no one. Giving it the technical meaning insisted for, we turn loose a confessed felon — one who not only admits the commission of the crime charged in this case, but who also avows his only business to be, to travel and defraud others as he has the prosecutor.
No question is made upon the sufficiency of the proof, which is full and convincing, and in nothing contradicted or weakened.
¥e see that exact justice has been done, the defendant has had a full benefit of the law, his trial was fair and impartial, with no doubtful question ruled against him.
While the courts as strictly now as at any time in the history of the jurisprudence of the State, adhere to technicalities when they involve or contain principle, yet when they are empty and without reason, and tend to defeat law and right, they are no longer regarded.
Affirm the judgment.
*36McFarland, J.,
Said
I do not fully concur in the correctness of this opinion, hut am satisfied that in this particular case no injustice is done the prisoner.