Barnett v. State

54 Ala. 579
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 54 Ala. 579 (Barnett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. State, 54 Ala. 579 (Ala. 1875).

Opinion

BEICKELL, .0. J.

The indictment contains three counts, - the first charging that the defendants, being members or partners of a private corporation, caused or procured to be made, emitted, signed or.countersigned, without authority of law, a paper to answer the purpose of money. The second charges, that the defendants were associated together for the sale of merchandize, and caused or procured the paper to be made, emitted, &c. The third count charges the defendants with circulating paper, issued without authority of law, to answer the purposes of money. To the first and second counts a demurrer was interposed, on several grounds, and among others, because it is uncertain whether the defendants are charged individually, or as a private corporation, or as an association. The objection is not well taken; the indictment charges the defendants as individuals, and not as a corporation or association. The allegation that they were members or partners of a private corporation, or association, if it is not mere surplusage, serves only to point out the capacity in which they were acting in the commission of the offense — that they were engaged in transacting business as corporators, or as members of an association. That they were acting in that capacity does not relieve them from crinu[585]*585inal liability, nor aggravate or mitigate the offense. If the corporation or association would be indictable for the offense, the defendants are charged as the immediate and active agents in its commission, and are also indictable. The indictment directly and without ambiguity charges them individually with the offense. If it had charged the corporation or association, it would have been by its corporate name.

Another ground of demurrer is, that the defendants are charged in the disjunctive, as members of a corporation, or of an association. The common law rule is; that the indictment must not state the offense in the disjunctive, so as to leave it uncertain what is really intended to be relied upon as the accusation. The rule is materially modified by our statutes, many of the forms of indictment prescribed alleging the offense disjunctively, and the statute providing generally that when the offense may be committed with different means or intents, such means or intents may be alleged in the same count in the alternative. — B. C. § 4123. The objection has generally been confined to the statement of the offense, and rested' on the ground that it did not appear what particular offense the defendant was required to answer. That is not the objection now made — the offense, and the facts constituting it, are positively averred. The objection is, that it is averred the defendants were partners or corporators when they committed it. Whether they were the one or the other — or whether they were without any other association or connection, than participation in the offense charged, their guilt and punishment is the same. The allegation is, therefore, immaterial, and uncertainty in an immaterial allegation is not cause of demurrer. — 1 Bish. Cr. Pro. § 592; State v. Corrigan, 24 Conn. 286.

The statute, under which the first and second counts are framed, declares, “ any person, private corporation, or association, who makes, emits, signs or countersigns, or causes or procures to be made, emitted, signed or countersigned, without authority of law, any paper to answer the purposes of money, or for general circulation, must each, on conviction, be fined,” &c. — B. C. § 3643. It is a general rule of criminal pleading, that if written instruments, or papers which may be written or printed, enter into - the gist of the offense — if the offense consists in the making, utterance or publication of such instruments, they must be set out in words and figures in the indictment. The most frequent application of the rule is to indictments for forgery, libel, sending threatening letters, &c. — Whart. Am. Cr. Law, § 306. In these cases the offense depends wholly on the character of the instrument. The court can determine only from the instru[586]*586ment, whether it is of the character of which forgery can be' committed, or whether its matter falls within the legal definition of libellous; or whether the letter is within the statute punishing the offense. The character of the paper is not of the gist of this offense — whatever may be its character, if issued or circulated to answer the purposes of money, without authority of law, the offense is complete. It is the purpose for which it is issued or circulated, and the absence of legal authority for its issuance or circulation that constitutes the offense. If this is its purpose, its form, or its contents, is not material. If a particular form, or particular contents, were essential, the statute would be easy of evasion, and the community subject to all the evils it was designed to remedy. The form, or contents, may furnish evidence that the parties engaged in its emission or circulation, had not the criminal purpose. That is matter of fact to be determined by the jury. The purpose would not be inferred as matter of law, from the paper, whatever may be its form, or its contents.— Bliss v. Anderson, 31 Ala. 612. So the form or contents can not, as matter of law, negative the criminal purpose. The indictment should so describe the paper that the defendant will be informed of the facts relied on to constitute the offense and that he may be prepared to make his defense. The indictment in this case sets out a copy of the paper, and thereby fully informs the defendants and the court of the facts relied on as making the offense. It could not have been more particularly described. Any description identifying it, ■would have been sufficient.

"We can not see that any injury could have resulted to the ■defendants from the entry of'a nolle prosequi, as to the third ■count of the indictment, after the evidence was closed. It ■operated an acquittal on that count, all which could have been effected by a verdict of not guilty. — Whar. Am. Or. Law, § 513.

The difference between the word cents, as written in the paper offered in evidence, and its abbreviations cts. as written in the indictment, is not material.

The essence of the offense is the issue, without authority of law, of paper for general circulation or to answer the purposes of money. The evidence that the paper was used as money- — that it circulated as such where it was issued — that it was given and accepted in exchange for merchandize, or for marketable articles, was proper. It tended to show its adaptation to circulation and use as money. This was the effect of the evidence to which objection was made, and the objection was properly overruled. There was no error in refusing to permit the witness, Norvell, to state the purposes [587]*587for which the paper was issued. Whether it was issued for general circulation, or to answer the purposes'of money, it was the province of the jury to determine from the evidence.

The several charges requested seem to be intended to present the question of the criminal liability of a principal for the -wrongful act of an agent, or of a partner, for that of his associate; and the liability of the defendants to a joint indictment. A principal or a partner may be civilly liable in damages for the tort of his agent or associate, under facts which would not subject him to criminal responsibility. In a civil suit, the material inquiry is, whether the wrong was done while the agent was within the line of the duty with which he was charged, or the partner within the scope of the partnership.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ala. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-state-ala-1875.