Commonwealth v. Forney

88 Pa. Super. 451, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 9, 1926
DocketAppeal 130
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 Pa. Super. 451 (Commonwealth v. Forney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Forney, 88 Pa. Super. 451, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212 (Pa. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The appellant, Byron Forney, was convicted of the crime of obtaining $100 frqm, H. E. Montgomery by means of certain false pretenses relative to the manner in which The Forney Mutual, a certain oil and gas company, had been organized and was being operated.

When the case was called for .trial counsel for appellant moved, to quash the indictment, which motion was overruled by the trial judge and two pleas, {1) autrefois acquit and (2) not guilty, were then entered. The Commonwealth traversed the plea of autrefois *454 acquit by a replication ¡and joined issue on both pleas. At the close of the testimony for the Commonwealth counsel for appellant moved the court to direct the jury to find for him upon his plea of autrefois acquit. This motion was refused and the court submitted the issues upon both pleas to the jury at the same time with instructions to render separate verdicts on each issue, and explained to the jurors that if they found in favor of the appellant on the plea of autrefois acquit it would not be necessary for them to pass upon his guilt or innocence.

The jury returned two verdicts, in one of which they found against the defendant on his plea of autrefois acquit and in the other found him guilty on the general issue. Whereupon counsel for appellant filed motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial which were overruled and sentence pronounced. Upon appeal' to this court the court below granted a supersedeas.

The assignments of error are sixteen in number and specify various alleged errors on the part of the trial judge, which, for the purposes of this opinion, may be grouped as follows: (a) Refusal to quash indictment; (b) Submitting issue on special plea of autrefois acquit to jury along with the general issue; (c) Errors in admission land rejection of evidence; (d) Errors in denying certain points submitted on behalf of defendant, and in the general charge; (e) Overruling motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial.

Before taking up in detail a discussion of the assignments of error it should be pointed out that the uncontroverted testimony shows that the defendant, a resident of the city of McKeesport, Allegheny County, and Walter L. Riggs of the same place entered into an agreement under date of December 27, 1919, for the formation of a partnership under the name of “The Forney Mutual” for the purpose of drilling for oil and gas. Tn the agreement it was set forth, inter alia, that the defendant was the holder of five certain oil *455 and gas leases on various lots in said city which he undertook by said agreement to hold in trust for said Forney Mutual.

It was further recited that the defendant and a number of other persons had associated themselves together to form a partnership, “in which their associates and assigns may be admitted......for the purpose of drilling for oil and gas, and in the furtherance of such purpose -to buy, sell and hold real estate and leases on real estate,” etc.

By the fourth paragraph of the agreement the capital stock of the partnership was fixed at $175,000, divided into 1750 shares of $100 each. Under the terms of the agreement Biggs was designated as trustee, meaning, as explained in the defendant’s testimony, that Biggs was to represent “the shareholders, the individual shareholders” and that the defendant was to represent “the shareholders as a whole.” By the eighth paragraph of the agreement it was provided as follows: “Eighth: The said Byron Forney shall receive in payment for the oil and gas leases above set forth the sum of $10,000 and he shall receive for his services rendered and to be rendered in organizing and financing this partnership Fifty shares of the capital stock of the partnership. That said Byron Forney shall further receive for the sale of the stock of the partnership a sum equal to fifteen per cent of the par value of the stock sold by him.”

In the ninth paragraph it was provided that Biggs should receive for his services in representing the shareholders three shares of the capital stock of the partnership, which should be in full payment for all his services, and that he should receive no salary. This stock was placed upon the market for the purpose of securing funds to carry on the operation and drill wells, and H. L. Miller, a resident of Grove City, Mercer County, was appointed as one of the selling agents. In all 360 shares of stock were sold for *456 $36,000, of which amount $10,000 were retained by the defendant for said leases in addition to the said fifty shares of stock; $11,607.50 were retained by the defendant and his agents for “stock selling commissions, miscellaneous salaries and organization expense,” the defendant’s commission being at the rate of 15 per cent, for stock sold; and $2,336.09 were applied to office and traveling expenses, etc., leaving a balance of $12,056.41 in the treasury. No wells were ever drilled. Under date of July 1, 1920, the Forney Mutual advised its stockholders that “the said field is now a thing of the past” and asked them to decide whether the said balance should be applied towiard drilling a well elsewhere or should be divided pro rata among the shareholders. A large majority having voted to have the money divided, it was so distributed and each share of stock received as its pro rata amount $33.49. The specific charge in the indictment grew out of the fact that the defendant went to Grove City, Mercer County, on February 25, 1920, and was taken by the said Miller to the Overland garage, where a number of prospective purchasers of siaid stock had assembled, and it is charged by the Commonwealth that the defendant induced the prosecutor in this case, H. E. Montgomery, and several other persons, to purchase stock in the said partnership by means of certain false pretenses, through which he was induced to give his check for $100 to the said Miller several days later for one share of stock in said partnership, a certificate for the same being delivered to him by said agent.

In considering the alleged false pretenses charged in the indictment and testified to at the trial it is important to keep in mind that the criminal offense of securing money by false pretense under section 111 of the Act of March 31,1860, P. L. 410, consists in the actual obtaining of the same by means of the false assertion, with intent to cheat and defraud, of an alleged existing fact or facts, calculated to deceive a person of ordi *457 nary prudence and caution, and cannot be established by proof of promises to do something in the future, even if the jury should find that when making the promises the defendant had no intention of carrying them out: Commonwealth v. Mauk, 79 Pa. Superior Ct. 153, 158. Looking at the promises as testified to by H. E. Montgomery, the prosecutor, land as corroborated by other witnesses called in behalf of the Commonwealth, we find that one of the representations alleged to have been made by the defendant was that the said partnership had obtained five leases which cost it nothing except the usual one-eighth royalty to the land owner, and that while other people were paying salaries and commissions for promotion and stock selling purposes there were no salaries and no commissions in the Forney Mutual.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Pa. Super. 451, 1926 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-forney-pasuperct-1926.