Anable v. Commonwealth

24 Gratt. 563
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 10, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 24 Gratt. 563 (Anable v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anable v. Commonwealth, 24 Gratt. 563 (Va. 1873).

Opinions

Christian, J.

The indictment in this case is founded upon the 49th section of chap. 192 of the Code, which is in the following words: “ If a person obtain by any false pretence or token, from any person, with intent to defraud, money or other property which may be the subject of larceny, he shall be deemed guilty of the larceny thereof.”

The indictment contained but one count, which is a simple count for larceny ; and charges that “William J. Anable, on the 27th day of March, in the year one thousand ■eight hundred and seventy-two, at the said city.(of Richmond), and within the jurisdiction of the Hustings court ■of the city of Richmond, a certain check, the same being an order to the Planters Rational Bank, dated Richmond, March 27th, 1872, for the payment of three hundred ■dollars to E. B. Hewburu or order, and endorsed Edward B. Hewburn, and of the value of three hundred dollars, [566]*566signed by one J. H. White, the maker thereof, the said check, at the time of committing the felony aforesaid, being the property of said J. H. White, and the said sum of three hundred dollars, payable and secured by and upon the said check, being due and unsatisfied to the said J. H. White, the proprietor thereof, feloniously did steal, take and carry away, against the peace and dignity of the commonwealth of Virginia.”

As to the question so elaborately and ably argued by the prisoner’s counsel, that the statute declaring that a party who obtains money or other property, the subject of larceny, “shall be deemed guilty of the larceny thereof,” should be construed as fixing the punishment of the offence, and not as changing the mode of proceeding or the form of the indictment, it is sufficient to remark, that whatever may be the view of this court upon that question, as an original proposition, it cannot now be reopened, and must be considered as res adjudicata.

The principle settled in Dowdy’s case, 9 Gratt. 727, followed in Leftwich’s case, 20 Gratt. 716, and recently in Pierce’s case, 21 Gratt. 846, have fixed the judicial interpretation of the statute. That interpretation, accepted and acted upon by the profession since the year 1852, and the Legislature, with full knowledge of this judicial, interpretation, never having amended the statute, it would be mischievous to the last degree now to change-it; and the rule stare decisis must now prevail. It must, therefore, be now held as the settled law of this State, that upon an indictment simply charging larceny, the commonwealth may now show either that the subject of the lai’ceny was received with a knowledge that it was-stolen, or that it was obtained by a false token or false pretence.

This is sufficient to dispose of one of the grounds of' error assigned and much relied on by the prisoner’s-[567]*567counsel. The other assignments of error require more particular consideration.

First. The refusal of the court to give the first tion asked for by the prisoner’s counsel.

That instruction is as follows: “ If the jury believe from the evidence, that the prisoner had sums of money audited and allowed him by the board of supervisors of Henrico county, sufficient to pay all existing legal warrants drawn by him in his own favor, and passed to and owned by other parties, which have been registered on the books of the treasurer of the county before the warrants said to have been gold to Hr. "White, and also to pay the warrants of Hr. White, then they must acquit the prisoner.”

I am of opinion that this instruction ought to have been given. This instruction asserts the proposition, that the prisoner could not be found guilty of obtaining the check of Hr. White by false pretences, if at the time the warrant was sold to him the prisoner had funds audited and allowed him by the board of supervisors sufficient to pay this warrant and all others which had been drawn by him and registered upon the books of the treasurer of the county.

Flow, while the statute declares that a party obtaining money or other thing of value by false pretences “shall be deemed guilty of the larceny thereof,” it is manifest that he cannot be found guilty under a simple count charging him with larceny, any more than under one charging specifically the offence of obtaining money or other property by false pretences, if there is wanting in the proof any of those elements which constitute that offence. To constitute the offence described in the statute four things must concur:

1. There must be an intent to defraud;

2. There must be an actual fraud committed;

[568]*5683. False pretences must be used for the purpose of perpetrating the fraud; aud

4. The fraud must be accomplished by means of the false pretences made use of for the purpose; that is, they must be in some degree the cause, if not the controlling and decisive cause, which induced the owner to part with his property.

If any of these essential elements are wanting, the offence is not made out. But especially is the gravamen of the offence that the pretences are false; and if the prisoner can show that the representations upon which he obtained the property from the owner are true he cannot be convicted; and certainly all testimony tending to show that fact is proper to be considered by the jury.

If the hypothetical case put in the instruction offered by the prisoner’s counsel, could be made out by the proof (and of this the jury must be the sole judges), then the representations made by the prisoner, in offering the warrant for sale, that he had allowed and audited in his favor a sufficient fund to meet this warrant was true and not a false pretence.

It is a well-settled rule, established by repeated decisions of this court, that if there is any evidence before a jury tending to prove a case supposed in au instruction asked for, and the instruction propounds the law correctly, it should be given. In Hopkins Brothers v. Richardson, 9 Gratt., 496, Lee, J., delivering the opinion of the court, said: “ In a plain case of the total absence of evidence tending to make out the supposed case, the court may well refuse to give any instruction based upon it. But where there is such evidence, of however little weight it may appear to be to the court, or however inadequate in its opinion to make out the case supposed, it is best aud safest for the court not to refuse to give the instruction asked for if it propound the law correctly.”

[569]*569And. so also in Farish & Co. v. Reigle, 11 Graft. 719, It was held, that if there be any relevant and competent testimony, however slight, tending to prove the case supposed in the instruction, the party asking for it is entitled to have the law in that particular hypothetically expounded to the jury. There was in this case evidence strongly tending to prove the supposed facts stated in this instruction. The refusal of the court to give it might well have, and did have, the effect of bringing the minds of the jury to the conclusion that the prisoner might be convicted of obtaining the check from Dr. "White under false pretences, although he could show that at the time the warrant was sold to him it was a valid and legal warrant, drawn upon a fund ample for its re•demption.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Gratt. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anable-v-commonwealth-va-1873.