Austin v. State

143 Tenn. 300
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 143 Tenn. 300 (Austin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. State, 143 Tenn. 300 (Tenn. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendants below, B. D. Austin and John Yeaman, were tried on an indictment containing six counts. By consent, a verdict of not guilty was returned as to the fifth and sixth counts of the indictment, and they will be eliminated from this discussion.

The first count charged the defendants with the crime of obtaining the signature of the prosecutor, B. R. Purnell, to a deed by false pretense.

The second count charged the defendants with a conspiracy to defraud ihe prosecutor and the actual consummation of the conspiracy, .

[302]*302The third count charged the defendant Austin with the crime of being an accessory before the fact in the commission of a felony, in that he moved, counseled, and procured his codefendant Yeaman to commit a felony.

The fourth count charged both defendants with forgery.

The jury returned a verdict of not guilty as to the first count, and a verdict of guilty as to the other three counts.

The facts, briefly stated, are that the defendant Austin, a resident of Le Flore county, Miss., and his wife’s brother, B. R. Purnell, a resident of Wilson county, Tenn., had formerly purchased some lands together in Mississippi. They had several lawsuits growing ont of these land transactions, and at the end of the litigation it appears that Purnell had acquired all the interest which the defendant Austin had in said lands, there being more than eight hundred acres of same. The feeling between these parties was very bitter, and they did not speak to each other.

After dark, on the evening of May 15, 1919, the defendants, accompanied by two other men, C. E. Rogers and -Yeaman, brother of the defendant John Yeaman, drove from Nashville to the home of the prosecutor, a distance of thirty-seven or thirty-eight miles; the defendant Austin, however, getting out of the car something like a quarter of a mile before it reached the home of the prosecutor, Purnell. Yeaman went into the home of Purnell and represented himself to be a federal officer in seach of offenders, and pretended to remember a charge against Purnell for failure to obey a court summons, and in this connection induced Purnell to go with him out to the car. [303]*303where, according to the testimony of the prosecutor, the defendant Yeaman told him he would have to sign an affidavit that he had not been summoned to appear in court, whereupon Yeaman produced a typewritten paper, which was, in fact, a deed conveying said Mississippi lands to the defendant Austin; that said Yeaman read said paper as an affidavit reciting that the prosecutor had not been summoned to court; that the prosecutor did not have his glasses and it being quite dark out at the car, and that he took a fountain pen from the defendant Yeaman and signed said paper writing without being able to read the same; that the defendant John Yeaman and his associates then started to Nashville, taking the defendant Austin in the car at the point where they left him a short time before. The next morning Eogers and-Yeaman signed said paper writing as subscribing witnesses and went before a notary public and acknowledged same in the usual form. .The deed was then taken to Mississippi and placed of record in the register’s office of the county in which the lands were located.

Mr. Purnell, becoming suspicious that he had probably been defrauded in some way, wired his attorney in Mississippi to look out for an instrument relating to his land, and the defendant Austin was apprehended before he made any disposition of the land.

There is no evidence to show who prepared the instrument, or where it was prepared, or that it was ever in the actual possession of the defendant Austin; in, fact, the original instrument was never produced, and only a cer-[304]*304tifled copy from the register’s office in Le Flore county, Miss., was introduced in evidence on the trial.

Pending the appeal in this case the defendant Yeaman was killed, and the case has been abated as to him.'

In disposing of the case, we concur with the learned trial judge in his statement that the one determinative question is whether the facts detailed above constitute forgery.

Section 6596 of Thompson’s Shannon’s Code defines forgery as follows:

‘‘Forgery is the fraudulent making" or alteration of any writing to the prejudice of another’s rights.”

It is insisted on behalf of the defendant Austin that the facts detailed above do. not constitute forgery, and he relies upon the case of Hill v. State, 1 Yerg., 76, 24 Am. Dec., 141, in support of his contention. We quote from that case as follows:

“ That on the Bd day of April, 1822, in the county of Williamson, the accused sold land to Daniel Ireland for $465, to be paid in installments at stated periods; that the note on which the indictment is founded was executed at the time and place aforesaid, in part payment for the land; that Ireland was an illiterate man; that the accused wrote the note, with the other notes for consideration money, in presence of the said Ireland and the subscribing witness, and read it, together with the other notes, over to the prosecutor in the hearing of the subscribing witness; that he, the accused, had written the note in question for $100, when it should have been written for $65; that it was by. the [305]*305accused falsely and fraudulently read over as a note for $65, when in fact it was written for $100, and that it was done with a view to defraud and injure the said Daniel,’ .etc.

On this special finding the circuit court gave judgment against the prisoner, from which judgment this writ of error is prosecuted. Waiving for. the present the form of the indictment and want of plea and issue, let us inquire if the facts found constitute the offense of forgery.

“Forgery, at the common law, is the falsely making of a note or other instrument with intent to defraud. The definition implies that there must be an act done, or procured to be done, to constitute this offense. The above definition is taken from 2 Leach, Crown Law, 785., where the author says: ‘A note or other instrument may be falsely made, either by putting on it a name of a person who does not- exist, or by putting on it the name of one in existence without his consent, or by altering it,’ etc. Here the accused has put no name to the instrument; but it is found by the special verdict that he wrote the note for the wrong sum and then induced the signing by a false reading ; still it' was the real signature of the person; and all that can be said is that he was cheated, by a false representation of the accused. This, though a cheat, was not a forgery.”

And so in the instant case the accused put no name to the instrument, but he induced the signing by a false readying, or by a false pretense, but the signature was the real [306]*306signature of the prosecutor, who wag cheated by a false representation of Yeaman.

We are of the opinion that the case just quoted from is . . m point. It was decided by this court ninety-seven years ago, and has never been overruled or modified, and we see no occasion to overrule it at this late date, especially since we have a statute that covers a case like the one under consideration, and Which will be referred to later.

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Bluebook (online)
143 Tenn. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-state-tenn-1920.