Ex parte Parker

11 Neb. 309
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 Neb. 309 (Ex parte Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Parker, 11 Neb. 309 (Neb. 1881).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This ease was submitted to the court chiefly upon the question of jurisdiction in the committing magistrate. The case was heard upon the evidence taken before him, no application for additional testimony being made by either party, and the magistrate having returned and certified all the testimony taken before him.

Does this testimony establish prima fade the guilt of the petitioners, or either of them, of the offense charged within the county of Douglas ?

The offense with which the petitioners are charged is set out in the statute in the following words :

“ If any person, by false pretense or pretenses, shall obtain from any other person any money, goods, merchandise, or effects whatever, with intent to cheat and defraud such persons of the same,” etc. 1875, 9.

The complaint charges that the petitioners “ on the 19th day of March, a.d. 1880, in the county of Douglas and within the city limits of the city of Omaha, Nebraska, unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously, did falsely pretend to the complainant, Freeman P. Keykendall, who is a member of a firm doing business in the city of Omaha, under the firm name of Reed, Jones & Co., * * that they, the said T. B. Parker and Thomas Sawyer, were * * the owners and possessors, free from incumbrance, of the following described personal property situate and being in Dorchester, in the county of Saline, in the state of Nebraska, to-wit: Thirty thousand bushels of corn, of the value of six thousand dollars, and the cribs in which said corn was deposited, of the [311]*311value of five hundred dollars; and that the said T. B. Parker * '* and Thomas Sawyer were the owners, free from incumbrance, of a stock of merchandise in their store in said Dorchester, county and state aforesaid, of the value of four thousand dollars, and that they, the said T. B. Parker and Thomas Sawyer, were worth, jointly and severally, the sum of eighteen thousand dollars over and above all of their joint and several liabilities; with the felonious intent then and there to cheat and defraud the said firm of Reed, Jones & Co., and all the members thereof, and by means of said false pretense and pretenses they, the said T. B. Parker * * and Thomas Sawyer, unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously, then and there did obtain from the said William P. Reed, Ellis O. Jones, and Freeman P. Keykendall, comprising the firm of Reed, Jones & Co., the following described goods and merchandise, to-wit: * * * of the total value of seven hundred and twenty-eight'dollars and seventy-two cents, of the goods, chattels, merchandise, and' property of the said William P. Reed, Ellis O. Jones, and Freeman' P. Keykendall * * with the felonious intent then and there unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously to cheat and defraud the said * * Reed, Jones & Co. of the goods, chattels, merchandise, and property aforesaid; whereas, in truth and in fact, the said T. B. Parker * * and Thomas Sawyer, at the time and times aforesaid, did not own said corn, or any part thereof, nor the cribs, or any part thereof, and whereas, in truth and in fact, the said T. B. Parker * * * * and Thomas Sawyer, at the time and times aforesaid, did not have the stock of merchandise, as by them represented, of the value of four thousand dollars, but in truth and in fact the said stock of goods and merchandise was of the value of twenty-five hundred dollars, and no more; and whereas, in truth and [312]*312in fact, the said T. B. Parker and Thomas Sawyer are not jointly and severally worth the sum of eighteen thousand dollars over and above their joint and several liabilities, nor of any sum or amount whatever’. And the said T. B. Parker * * and Thomas Sawyer, at the time they so falsely pretended, as aforesaid, well knew the said pretense and pretenses to be fraudulent and false,” etc.

The testimony is to the effect that on the 14th of January, 1880, William Eisher, the traveling salesman of Reed, Jones & Co., wholesale merchants of Omaha, Douglas county, called at the store of Parker & Sawyer (petitioners), at Dorchester, Saline county. He found Mr. Sawyer in the store, and had a general conversation with him, in which Mr. Sawyer made representations as to the business and means of the firm, which are claimed to have been false and made with intent to defraud, but which it is not deemed necessary to set out at length in this opinion. In the course of the conversation Eisher informed Sawyer that he had samples open at the hotel, and invited him over there. He went, and after examining the samples, gave Eisher an order for goods amounting to over eight hundred dollars. This order was a verbal one, so far as Sawyer or Parker & Sawyer were concerned, was reduced to writing by Eisher, and by him forwarded to the house at Omaha. These goods were not to be actually ready for delivery until the following March. There is no testimony as to anything having been said as to the place of delivery, or the means or line by which the same were to be shipped •or delivered. There is testimony as to representations, which are claimed to be false and fraudulent, having been made by the petitioners, or one of them, to Mr. Koch, traveling salesman for another firm, who communicated the same to Reed, J ones & Co.; also of [313]*313similar representations made by them to Mr. Montgomery, the attorney of R., J. & Co., who went to Dorchester for the special purpose of ascertaining the financial condition of the petitioners. Upon the return of the latter to Omaha, and his report being made to R., J. & Co., they shipped (March 19), upon the said order forwarded to them by their traveling salesman, Eisher, in the month of January preceding, goods to the amount of $728.72, by the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad in Nebraska, consigned to Parker & Sawyer, Dorchester, Nebraska. There is also testimony tending to prove that the representations made by Sawyer to Eisher at the time of the giving of the order for the goods* as well as those made by him at a subsequent date to Mr. Koch, and those made by both Parker and Sawyer, at a subsequent date, to Mr. Montgomery, were false. Also testimony tending to prove that some time in July, 1880, the petitioners sold out their business at Dorchester, and di& not pay their debts.

The primary definition of the word obtain, as given by Webster, is “ to get hold of by effort.” The section of the statute under which the petitioners wore committed is almost a literal copy of the corresponding section of 30 Geo. II, Chap. 24, which has been held to reach almost every species of gross fraud by means of which the unsuspecting and over confident have been cheated out of money or goods. Yet I think that, in the very nature of things there is a difference .between those frauds which are perpetrated by means of the abuse of the forms of legitimate commercial transactions and those which consist of personations and so-called confidence games and tricks. In either case and by whatever means accomplished, the crime consists in the obtaining of the property — getting hold of the property, that is the corpus delicti.

[314]*314So far as the testimony in this case proves a contract for the purchase and sale of the goods in question, it was a contract within the statute of frauds. The value and price of the goods exceeded fifty dollars. There was no note or memorandum of such contract made in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged thereby, nor did the buyer accept or receive the goods or any part thereof, nor did they pay any part of the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Neb. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-parker-neb-1881.