Court Opinion

ID: 9649669
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-23 15:05:27.950523+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:12:13.417869
License: Public Domain

House, C. J.
On a trial to a jury the defendant was found guilty of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses in violation of General Statutes § 53-360 (repealed by Public Acts 1969, No. 828, effective October 1, 1971). In pertinent part, this statute provided for a penalty for any person “who, by any false token, pretense or device, obtains from another any valuable thing . . . with intent to defraud him or any other person.” The defendant has appealed from the judgment rendered on the verdict. Of his four assignments of error, he has briefed three and the fourth is considered *262to have been abandoned. State v. Croom, 166 Conn. 226, 232, 348 A.2d 556; State v. Beaulieu, 164 Conn. 620, 621, 325 A.2d 263. The assignments of error which he has pressed on appeal are that the court erred (1) in denying his motion to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence, (2) in denying his motion to dismiss the information, and (3) in admitting in evidence a check and a driver’s license.
We consider first the claim of the defendant that the court erred in denying his motion to set aside the verdict in that it was contrary to the law and not supported by the evidence. Whether the evidence supports the verdict is tested by the summary of the evidence as printed in the appendices to the briefs. State v. Siberon, 166 Conn. 455, 456, 352 A.2d 285; State v. Hall, 165 Conn. 599, 601, 345 A.2d 17. There was evidence from which the jury could find the following pertinent facts: About 7:30 p.m. on August 15, 1970, Coleman met James H. Lee, an illiterate person, on the street in Waterbury and invited him to go for a ride. Lee accepted the invitation and Coleman drove him to the Waterbury Shopping Plaza. Coleman told Lee that he had a check and asked Lee to cash it for him. He gave Lee a check payable to Richard Cam and also handed Lee a driver’s license. Lee took the check and license to a large grocery store at the shopping plaza and asked a cashier to cash the check. She asked for identification and Lee then gave her the diiver’s license which Coleman had given to him. The cashier recognized the cheek as one reported to have been stolen from Guilford Arts, of Madison, and refused to cash it. Lee then walked from the store back to Coleman’s car, entered it and handed the check and driver’s license *263to the defendant. Coleman drove to the rear of the plaza where he was stopped by police who had been dispatched to the scene upon receipt of a complaint that someone was attempting to cash a stolen check. The police arrested Coleman and Lee and searched the car. They found nothing; bnt, after the search, an officer observed Coleman drop something under the seat of the ear and discovered there a wallet which contained a driver’s license in the name of Richard Cam and a check numbered 15587 bearing the name “Guilford Arts,” which license and check were identified by the cashier as those presented to her by Lee. A bookkeeper for Guilford Arts testified that around July 15, 1970, he had discovered some company checks and a cheekwriter missing and reported this to the Madison police. He identified the check which Lee had tried to cash as being one of the stolen checks. At the trial, Lee admitted that he had pleaded guilty in the Circuit Court to a charge of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses.
On this evidence, the jury could reasonably and logically conclude that Coleman was guilty as charged. They could properly infer that the attempt to obtain money by cashing the stolen check was an attempt to obtain money by the false representation that the check was a valid check issued by Guilford Arts to Richard Cam, and the false representation by means of the driver’s license that Lee was in fact Richard Cam. “A representation may be found to be false either expressly or by implication and may consist of any act, word, symbol, or token calculated and intended to deceive.” State v. Farrah, 161 Conn. 43, 49-50, 282 A.2d 879. The jury could also reasonably infer intent to defraud by the use of another person’s *264driver’s license, and infer guilty knowledge from the attempt to conceal the wallet containing the check and the driver’s license when the police made the arrest. Intent to defraud, which is an essential element of the crime of obtaining money by false pretenses, is difficult to prove beyond a reasonable doubt by direct evidence but it may be inferred from the conduct of the accused. State v. Farrah, supra; State v. Smith, 157 Conn. 351, 354, 254 A.2d 447. The necessary intent may be inferred from the circumstances and from what was done by the accused. State v. Fredericks, 149 Conn. 121, 124, 176 A.2d 581.
We find no merit to the contention of the defendant that the court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict as contrary to law and the evidence.
There was also no error in admitting into evidence the check and the driver’s license. They were positively identified by the cashier as the check and the license which were tendered to her in the attempt to have her cash the check. The arresting officer also identified them as being in the wallet which Coleman attempted to conceal under the seat of his car when he was apprehended in the parking lot of the shopping plaza, and the check was identified by the Guilford Arts’ bookkeeper as one of those stolen from that company. Both items were sufficiently identified to be properly admitted as full exhibits for the consideration of the jury.
The only remaining claim of the defendant is that the court erred in denying the defendant’s motion to dismiss the information and to discharge the defendant “because the state of Connecticut, in said information and in the bill of particulars, failed to charge the defendant with a crime.”
*265The defendant was charged in a so-called short form information as permitted by § 493 of the Practice Book.1 This form of information was first authorized by an amendment to the 1922 Practice Book which was adopted April 6, 1929, effective September 1, 1929. The obvious purpose of the amendment was to dispense with the prolixity of common-law averments alleging criminal offenses while still assuring to an accused his constitutional right to be apprised by the state’s pleadings of the essential elements of the crime with which he was being charged. State v. Beaulieu, 164 Conn. 620, 624, 325 A.2d 263; State v. Couture, 151 Conn. 213, 215-16, 196 A.2d 113; State v. Whiteside, 148 Conn. 208, 212, 169 A.2d 260, cert. denied, 368 U.S. 830, 82 S. Ct. 52, 7 L. Ed. 2d 33. To afford to an accused his full rights, § 495 of the present Practice Book (1963) also provides that if an accused feels that an information filed pursuant to § 493 of the Practice Book fails sufficiently to inform him of the offense with which he is charged to enable him to prepare his defense or to give him such information as he is entitled to under the Connecticut constitution, he may obtain further information upon filing *266a motion for a bill of particulars and, if still not satisfied, may seek an order of the court; Practice Book § 496; for a further bill of particulars.
The information filed against Coleman charged him with “the crime of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses at Waterbury, on or about 8/15/70, in violation of Section 53-360 of the General Statutes.” As we have noted, § 53-360 provided a penalty for anyone “who, by any false token, pretense or device, obtains from another any valuable thing . . . with intent to defraud him or any other person.” Coleman filed a motion for a bill of particulars asking that the state make its charges more particular by stating: “1. The specific nature of the offense or offenses which the defendant is charged with. 2. The time, place and manner in which this offense was committed. 3. The specific acts performed by the defendant which constitute all necessary elements of the crime charged. 4. The general circumstances surrounding the alleged crime. 5. State with particularity, the date, time, of said alleged violation and the Section of the Connecticut General Statutes violated. 6. State with particularity, the name or names, including addresses, of all persons the State alleges were involved in said violation.” In response to this motion, the state filed a bill of particulars stating: “1. On or about August 15, 1970 the defendant did attempt to obtain the sum of $87.79 from the Stop and Shop Market, Waterbury, by assisting one James H. Lee in presenting a stolen and forged check upon the account of Guilford Arts at the Union and New Haven Trust Company, New Haven, Connecticut. 2. August 15, 1970, Stop and Shop Market, Waterbury Plaza, Waterbury, Connecticut, *267at approximately 8:10 p.m. 3. See # 1 above. 4. See # 2 above. 5. See # 2 above. 6. The defendant and James H. Lee.”
The defendant at no time prior to or during the trial objected to the information or bill of particulars, nor did he move for a more specific statement or for a supplemental bill of particulars as permitted by §§ 495, 496 and 497 of the Practice Book. Nor did he move to quash the information as permitted by § 499 of the Practice Book on a claim that the particulars stated did not constitute the offense charged in the indictment. Rather, on the first day of trial, the court was expressly informed that the defendant was satisfied and was not seeking any further information.2 Nevertheless, at the conclusion of the state’s case in chief, the defendant moved to dismiss the information and discharge the defendant, and has briefed a claim that the court committed error in denying the motion. It is his claim “that the State had not, by a Bill of Particulars, charged the defendant with a statutory crime.” He asserts that the bill of particulars was defective because it did not contain an allegation of an intent to defraud.
We find no error in the ruling of the court for three reasons, any one of which suffices to support the court’s decision. In the first place, as we have noted, at the start of the trial the defendant *268expressly represented to the court his satisfaction with the information supplied by the state in response to his motion for a bill of particulars. If any uncertainty existed as to the state’s pleadings or any further information was necessary to apprise the defendant of the statutory crime with which he was charged in the information in order to prepare his defense and to plead the judgment in bar of any further prosecution, the way was open to him to secure it by motion. Having expressed his satisfaction with the pleadings as they stood at the opening of the trial, the defendant waived any defect that might have been present in the information and in the bill of particulars. 21 Am. Jur. 2d, Criminal Law, §325. “[R]ights once waived cannot be regained by revoking the waiver.” Lee v. Casualty Co. of America, 90 Conn. 202, 208, 96 A. 952; Hendsey v. Southern New England Telephone Co., 128 Conn. 132, 135, 20 A.2d 722.
In the second place, the defendant has made no claim, and there is not the slightest indication in the record, that he was in any way prejudiced or that in its charge to the jury the court did not fully instruct them as to the burden of the state to prove an intent to defraud. The defendant has not attacked the charge and, accordingly, it is not printed in the record. It is, therefore, presumed to have been correct. Begley v. Kohl & Madden Printing Ink Co., 157 Conn. 445, 451, 254 A.2d 907; State v. Mallette, 153 Conn. 584, 587, 219 A.2d 447. “It is essential to any orderly trial that the jury be presumed, in the absence of a fair indication to the contrary, to have followed the instructions of the court as to the law.” State v. Bausman, 162 Conn. 308, 314, 294 A.2d 312.
In the third place, the bill of particulars did not exist in a vacuum. It must be read with the informa*269tion which the defendant asked he particularized. “The office of a bill of particulars is to supply both the accused and the court additional information concerning an accusation that the defendant has committed an act or acts constituting a criminal offense.” (Emphasis added.) 41 Am. Jur. 2d, Indictments and Informations, § 163. “The function of the bill of particulars in a criminal case is to provide information fairly necessary to enable the accused to understand and prepare his defense against the charges without prejudicial surprise upon the trial. It is complementary to the shorter form of indictment.” Brown v. Commonwealth, 378 S.W.2d 608 (Ky.). “In other words, the general rule is that a bill of particulars merely amplifies the indictment and limits the scope of the proof on the trial.” Note, “Sufficiency of indictment as affected by bill of particulars,” 10 A.L.R. 982, 983. The bill of particulars supplements rather than supplants the information or indictment.
In the short form information, the defendant was expressly charged with the crime of attempting to obtain money by false pretenses “in violation of Section 53-360 of the General Statutes.” This section of the statute, a violation of which was the specific charge lodged against the defendant, included in its definition of the offense the obtaining of any valuable thing from another, by any false token, pretense or device, “with intent to defraud him or any other person.” The bill of particulars, answering the question asking for the nature of the offense by reciting that “the defendant did attempt to obtain the sum of $87.79 from the Stop and Shop Market, Waterbury, by assisting one James H. Lee in presenting a stolen and forged check,” certainly did inform the defendant of the *270nature of the offense. 4 Wharton, Criminal Law and Procedure (Anderson Rev.) ^ 1773; 41 Am. Jur. 2d, Indictments and Informations, § 111. We conclude that there is no merit whatsoever to the present claim of the defendant that “the state of Connecticut, in said information and in the bill of particulars, failed to charge the defendant with a crime.”
There is no error.
In this opinion Shapiro, Loiselle and MacDonald, Js., concurred.

 “[Practice Book] Sec. 493. charging the offense The indictment or information may charge, and is valid and sufficient if it charges, the offense for which the accused is being prosecuted in one or more of the following ways: (a) By using the name given to the offense by the common law or by a statute, (b) By stating so much of the definition of the offense, either in terms of the common law or of the statute defining the offense or in terms of substantially the same meaning, as is sufficient to give the court and the accused notice of what offense is intended to be charged. The indictment or information may refer to a section or subsection of any statute creating the crime charged therein, and in determining the validity or sufficiency of such indictment or information regard shall be had to such reference.”

 The following colloquy occurred between the presiding judge and counsel for the defendant on the first day of trial: “The Court: Mr. Daly, in looking through the file in this matter I notice there is a motion for bill of particulars and motion for production and disclosure. Mr. Daly: If your Honor please, I have had a response filed by the State’s Attorney’s office to the Bill of Particulars, and also a response filed to the Motion for Disclosure. The Court: They are satisfactory to you; is that correct? Mr. Daly: Yes, each question is answered. The Court: All right. There is nothing further, then, that you are seeking on either one of those? Mr. Daly: No.”