Court Opinion

ID: 9325819
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-14 17:08:00.177538+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:02.088728
License: Public Domain

By the Court,

Brown, J.
The main ground relied upon in support of the demurrer is that the alleged pretense would not furnish a reason why the owners of the goods should part with them — that no man of ordinary discretion could be thus induced to give credit.
The authorities upon this point are by no means uniform; one class holding that the false pretenses must be so artful, that they are “ calculated to impose upon a person using ordinary caution in the transaction,’’ while another class are upon the theory that the statute is made for the benefit of not .only the shrewd business man, but also for the credulous and unsuspecting.
In the case of The People vs. Williams, 4 Hill, 9, it is held that though the representation be false, it" is not within the statute unless calculated to deceive persons of ordinary prudence and discretion. In the case of the Commonwealth vs. Hutchinson, 2 Penn. Law Jour., 243, the learned Judge says: “ Broad, however, as is the phrasé, ‘ for any false pretense whatever,’,it still has a legal limit, beyond which it cannot be carried in this or any; other case. It extends no farther than to a case where a party has .obtained money or property by falsely representing himself to be in a situation in which he is not, or any occurrence which has not happened, to which persons of ordinary caution might give credit. Where the pretense is absurd or irratic.nal, of such as the party had at the very time the means of detecting at hand, it is not within the Act.” The same doctrine is held in the case of 3 Hawks, 620; 4 Pick., 177, 178; 14 Wend., 549 note; 2 Parker, 139, 147; 11 Ind., 154; 11 Wend., 566; Carrow vs. State, 7 Eng. (Ark.), 65; 3 Hill, 169; Goodhall's case, Ry. and Mood. Cr. Cas., 461, 463; Rose. Cr. Ev., 362; Young vs. The King, 3 Term R.
*72The best considered English and American cases, however, seem to hold a different doctrine.
It being remarked that the “pretense should be such as would deceive a man of average intelligence,’’ Lord Denman, C. J., answered : “ I never could see why that should be. Suppose a man has just enough [1'iaud] to impose upon a very simple person, and defraud him: how is it to be determined whether the degree of fraud is such as will amount to a misdemeanor?’’ R. vs. Wickham, 10 Ad. and E., 34. In the case of R. vs. Wooley, 1 Den. C. C., 559, it was held that want of prudence on the part of the prosecutor is no defense where the prosecutor was really imposed upon. See, also, R. vs. Ball, 2 Russ, on Cr., 289; 1 C. and Mars., 240; R. vs. Abbott, 2 Car. and Kir., 629; S. C., 1 Den. C. C., 273. In Pennsylvania it is now held that- “ it is no less a false pretense that the party imposed upon might, by common prudence, have avoided the imposition.’’ Com. vs. Henry, 10 Harris, 256. In New York the position of the earlier courts has been greatly qualified. See 4 Denio, 529; 4 Barb., 151; 5 Parker, 142. In § 416, 2 Bishop's Cr. L., 8d Ed, occurs this language: “ No man of business was ever found so wary as not to commit, at some time in his life, a mistake therein which any jury of twelve men would say, on their oath, could not be done by a man of ordinary judgment and discretion. These things being so, plainly, the Court cannot direct a juily to weigh a pretense, an argument, an inducement to action, in any other scale than that of its effect.”
It would seem that the design of the statute was that its provisions should bo sufficiently broad to protect the weak and shield the credulous against the arts and wiles of the shrewd, designing, and artful. With this view of the case, the information must, in this respect, be held sufficient.
Is there a sufficient averment that the prosecutor relied upon and believed the alleged pretenses to be true ? Such belief is an essential ingiedient of the offense — 4 Barb., 151; R. vs. Mills, 40 E. L. and E., 562; and upon principle it would seem that.it should be positively averred. But as the prosecutor has followed substantially the language of the statute in describing the offense, and the precedents which have so long been in use *73both in this country and in England as almost to become a part of the law, I do not feel warranted in sustaining the demurrer upon this ground.
The demurrer must be overruled.