Dana v. State

2 Ohio St. (N.S.) 91
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio St. (N.S.) 91 (Dana v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dana v. State, 2 Ohio St. (N.S.) 91 (Ohio 1853).

Opinion

Ranney, J.

The record in this case presents but a single question. The plaintiff in error was charged with the crime of forgery, and found guilty upon the first count of the indictment preferred against him. This count averred that the plaintiff, with others, “ did falsely utter, publish, and put off to one George Jones, with intent then and there to defraud the said George Jones, a certain false, forged note, as a true and genuine note of Still Randolph, given for the payment of seven hundred and fifty dollars, and which aforesaid forged note then and there, was of the purport and effect following, to wit.” Then follows what appears to be a perfect copy of such an instrument.

The objection is, that the count does not profess to sot forth a literal copy of the instrument alleged to be forged; and it is claimed, for this reason, to' be bad.

Perhaps no rule of criminal pleading is better settled than that, in all cases, where the fabrication of written instruments constitues the gist of the offense, as in forgery, libel, and the like, the indictment must show upon its face that a literal copy of the instrument is set forth, in order, as stated by the court in McMillen v. The State, 5 Ohio, 269, “ that the court may determine advisedly whether the publication of it constitutes the crime inhibited by the [81]*81law.” As is added in that case, “ all the precedents are so; and so are the authorities.” Tho only recognized exceptions to this rule occur in cases where the instrument is in possession of tho accused, destroyed, or for some other reason beyond tho roach of tho government, and can not, therefore, be laid before the grand jury. And in all such cases tho excuse for not setting it forth must be distinctly averred in the indictment and proved upon the trial.

*If no such excuse exists, it must be made to appear that a litoral copy is given, by the use of such words in the averment preceding its insertion, as in their usual and legal sense will make that fact manifest, and plainly imply that a correct recital is intended. Although the word “ tenor ” is generally employed for this purpose, yet no prescribed form of expression is indispensable; it is enough that it intends and professes equal exactness. Hence, “ as follows,” “ that is to say,” 11 in tho words following,” and the like, have all been held to import an accurate copy, and sufficient.

That the words “ purport and effect ” do not import it, but have an entirely different moaning, both in ordinary use and legal signification, has been held as often as tho question has been made in the courts of England and this country, for nearly two centuries, as appears from the best elementary authors and reported cases.

In 3 Chitty’s Criminal Law, 1040, it is said : “ Every indictment for forgery must sot forth tho instrument charged as fictitious in words and figures, in order that the court may be able to judge from the record whether it is a document in respect to which forgery can be committed. . . . The recital of the instrument is usually prefaced by the words, ‘ to the tenor following,’ which imports an exact copy; but the words ‘ as follows ’ are sufficient ; they intend the same and profess the same exactness. Tee word ‘ tenor ’ imports an exact- copy; the word ‘purport ’ means no more than the substance of the instrument.”

Archibold (Crim. PI. 42), after laying down thesame doctrine, proceeds to state the effect of professing to set forth only the substance of the instrument, thus: “If the recital of an indictment be introduced by the words ‘to tho effect following,’ or ‘ in substance as follows,’ and the nature of the case require a literal copy to be set forth the defendant may demur, move in arrest of judgment, or bring a writ of error."

Wharton, a recent American author on criminal law, treating [82]*82upon the same subject, and fully concurring in these views, says: “ Purport, it is said, means the substance of’an ^instrument :as it appears on the face of it to every eye that reads it; tenor means an exact copy of it. According to the purport and •effect and in substance, are bad.'

This definition of the word “ purport ” is taken from the opinion of all the judges in England; delivered by Justice Butler, in Gilchrist’s case, 2 Leach, 657; in which it became important to distinguish the purport of the instrument, as it appeared upon its face, from its legal import and effect. Three separate and distinct considerations enter into the structure of every instrument of writing, which can be made the subject of forgery. First. The precise language in which it is expressed ; this is its tenor. Second. What it appears or professes to bo, in all substantial particulars, as disclosed upon its face; this is its purport or substance. Third. Its legal effect, or the operation the law will give it, when enforced. To illustrate by an example drawn from our own law, suppose a note given by A to B, for $1,000, with twenty per cent, interest, without any time of payment inserted. Its tenor embraces the words and figures employed in writing it; its purport or substance is a promissory note of $1,000, with twenty |>er cent, interest; and its legal effect, a promissory note for $1,000, with six per cent, interest, and payable on demand.

I do not deem it necessary to make further extracts from the ■elementary authors, but content myself with referring to 2 East’s Pleas of the Crown, 983 ; Robinson’s Forms, 518; Russell on Crimes, .372; Lewis’ United States Criminal Law, 648; 2 Bouvier’s Law Diet. 392, 556.

These authors will be found fully sustained by the adjudged cases, commencing as early as Rex v. Beares, 1 Ld. Raym. 464, decided by the King’s Bench in 1698; Lloyd’s case, cited 1 East, 173; James Mason’s case, 1 East, 183; Wright v. Clements, 3 B. & Ald. 503; State v. Atkins, 5 Black. 458; State v. Twitty, 9 N. C. 248; State v. Jones, 1 McMullen, 236; State v. Parker, 1 Vt. 298; State v. Gustin, 2 South. 746; State v. Potts, 4 Halsted, 26; Com. v. Sweeney, 10 Serg. & R. 173; State v. Brownlow, *7 Humph. 63; McMillen v. The State, 5 Ohio, 269; Stephens v. State, Wright, 73.

The only deviation from these established rules, to be found in the books of precedents, is one prepared by Davis, a former solici[83]*83tor-general of the State of Massachusetts, and which, at an early day, came into very general use in that state; and from which, unfortunately, this indictment seems to have been taken. This circumstance would seem to have induced a more urgent necessity there than elsewhere to sustain the practice, if it could have been done. And yet we find the Supreme Court of that state, true to principle, discarding the innovation as often as the question has been made. In Commonwealth v. Haughton, 8 Mass. 110, the question arising whether the instrument should be set forth in words and figures, and Mr. Davis being present, was called upon by the court for his opinion. He stated that “ he had uniformly drawn indictments for this offense in the manner here used.” The court, however, did not concur with him as to sufficiency, but held that it must be literally set forth, and stated the reason to be, that “ a particular description of the instrument may enable the party •charged more effectually to prepare for his defense, and thus may become a shield to innocence.”

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Related

State v. Twitty
9 N.C. 248 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1822)
State v. Atkins
5 Blackf. 458 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1840)
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2 Ohio St. (N.S.) 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dana-v-state-ohio-1853.