Duffin v. People

107 Ill. 113, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 234
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 107 Ill. 113 (Duffin v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffin v. People, 107 Ill. 113, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 234 (Ill. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholpield

delivered the 'opinion of the Court:

The indictment under which plaintiff in error was convicted contains five counts, charging, in varying language, in some, the forging, and in the others, the uttering, and publishing as well, of an instrument, of which the following is a copy:

“$Í106tW. Belleville, Ill., April 12th, 1880.
“Four months (without grace) after date we, or either of us, promise to pay to the First National Bank of Belleville, or order, the sum of four thousand one hundred and six -$>s dollars, for value received, with eight per cent interest per annum from maturity, at the office of the First National Bank of Belleville.
gatoh 0c£|tntbt,
Julius Winkles,
Wm. B. Padeield.”

A general motion to quash the several counts was made hy plaintiff in error, and overruled by the court, and this is the first error alleged in the ruling to w.hich our attention is invited' by the printed argument in behalf of plaintiff in error. The contention is, that the indictment .charges, in each count, the forging of the name of Jacob Schmidt, and the copy of the note set out in each count shows the name to have been written in German; but since there is no allegation that the name of Jacob Schmidt was signed in German, each count is, upon its face, defective. In support of this, reference is made to Wharton on Crim, Pleading and Practice, (8th ed.) sec. 181, and Wharton on Crim. Law, (8th ed.) see. 729. The references are hardly pertinent. They show that an instrument in a foreign language must be translated and explained by averments in the indictment. But there is no pretense that the instrument here charged to have been forged is in the'German language. The name of Jacob Schmidt is simply written, in Gothic instead of Roman characters, and when written in the one it is not made to appear it is in anywise different from what it is when written in the other.

A special objection to the third count is urged, in that it charges that plaintiff in error did “forge and counterfeit a certain forged and counterfeited paper writing, ” whereas it ought to have charged the forging and counterfeiting of a paper writing, etc., merely. We perceive no inaccuracy in the language of the count. The result of forging and counterfeiting is, certainly, a forged and counterfeited paper writing. The words “forged” and “counterfeited,” as used, are simply equivalent to saying plaintiff in error made,or fabricated a false and counterfeited paper writing, by the process of forging and counterfeiting. The count is in the language of the old precedents. (1 Wharton on Precedents and Pleas, (4th ed.) No. 293. See, also, the form of indictment in The People v. Kingsley, 2 Cowen, 522.) But even if the count were bad, since the verdict is general, and the other 'counts are good, the objection would be unavailing. Townsend v. The People, 3 Scam. 326; Holliday v. The People, 4 Gilm. Ill; Sahlinger et al. v. The People, 102 Ill. 241; Murphy v. The People, 104 id. 528.

On the trial, the prosecution offered in evidence the promissory note alleged to have been forged, and a photographed copy thereof. Plaintiff in error objected, first, that the name of Jacob Schmidt was in a foreign language; and second, that the process of taking the photographed copy had not been proved by an artist in that line. Both objections were overruled by the court, and the offered evidence was given to the jury. This ruling constitutes the second error claimed, in the argument on behalf of plaintiff in error, to have occurred to his prejudice.

If what has been said in regard to the name of Jacob Schmidt, in discussing the motion to quash the indictment, is correct, it must follow the objection that his name was written in a foreign language is untenable. The name is simply “Jacob Schmidt,” written in characters that are understood as representing J-a-k-o-b S-c-h-m-i-d-t,

If the purpose of introducing the photographed copy in evidence had been to have proven the forgery by a comparison of handwritings, there would have been much more force than there is in the objection in that regard; but there was no such purpose or' use. The officers of the bank, observing that the ink in which the note was written was rapidly fading, had the note photographed, and this copy was offered in evidence simply to .prove the words of the original, and not the peculiarity of handwriting. Since the taking of that photograph the original has faded so that it has become illegible, or practically so. Under these circumstances we think there can be no doubt parol evidence of what the original note was would have been competent evidence, and most certainly a compared copy would, though there had been no attempt, in making it, to imitate the handwriting of the original. An artist may be required to determine whether the letters of a professed copy are an exact similitude as to form, shading and coloring of those of the original, where that is material; but inasmuch as the words may be the same, though the form, shading and coloring of the letters are different, it can not be indispensable to have a photographic artist where the sameness of the words in a copy with those in the original is alone to be proved. We think the proof of the copy here was clearly competent. The cashier of the bank ought to have been, and we presume was, able to tell just as well as the best photographer whether the toords in the copy were the same as the icords in the original.

The next contention of plaintiff in error is, that the evidence does not sustain the verdict. Each of the three purported makers of this promissory note swears, positively and unqualifiedly, that he did not sign it. Plaintiff in error admits they' did not sign it knowing what it was, but insists, nevertheless, their signatures are genuine, and that they do not explicitly deny that they are genuine. He admits, and testifies, that he presented this promissory note to the bank and obtained $4000 thereon, which he appropriated to his own use, and that neither of the purported makers of the note signed it knowingly or intentionally, but, he says, by artifice and deception he obtained each of their genuine signatures thereto; that he obtained Winkler’s under pretext of haying him sign a duplicate release of a mortgage; that he obtained Schmidt’s by pretending to have him sign an attachment bond, and that he obtained Padfield’s by having him sign what Padfield supposed to be a receipt; that in each case he artfully substituted the note for that which they were requested to sign and supposed they were signing when they wrote their names, without attracting their attention. He says he made an ink that he knew would rapidly fade, with which he wrote or rather filled up the note, and in which each of the parties wrote his name; that he did this in order that the note might become illegible before maturity, and the loss, therefore, fall on the bank rather than on the purported makers of the note. We think the purported makers of the note do each deny, in their evidence, the genuineness of their signatures, as well as the fact that they ever signed such a note. Schmidt, in answer to the question, “Did you sign this note?” answered, “No sir, I never did. I never signed any such note as that, for Felton or any body else. I never put my name there.

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Bluebook (online)
107 Ill. 113, 1883 Ill. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffin-v-people-ill-1883.