Fisher v. State

256 S.W. 858, 161 Ark. 586, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 555
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 24, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 858 (Fisher v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. State, 256 S.W. 858, 161 Ark. 586, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 555 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Hart, J.,

(after stating the facts). The defendant was indicted under ■§ 2449 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, which reads as follows: “Every person who, with intent to defraud or cheat another, shall designedly, by color of any false token or writing, or by any other false pretense, obtain a signature of any person to any written instrument, or obtain from any person any money, personal property, right of action, or other valuable thing or effects whatever, upon conviction thereof shall be deemed guilty of larceny and punished accordingly.”

The first assignment of error is that the indictment is fatally defective. We have copied the body of the indictment in our statement of facts, and it need riot be repeated here.

Tested by our decisions construing the statute just quoted, we are of the opinion that the court properly overruled the demurrer to the indictment. It is well settled by our decisions that a false pretense is a false representation of an existing fact or past event, by one who knows that it is not true, and which is of 'such a nature as to induce the party to whom it is made to part with something of value; and it is only necessary that the false pretense be the inducing motive to the obtaining of the goods or money by the defendant. Parker v. State, 98 Ark. 575, and Lawson v. State, 120 Ark. 337.

The indictment in question charges that a false pretense was in fact made. That it was made with the intention of defrauding the prosecuting witness, W. J. Shiver, and that the prosecuting witness was in fact defrauded to his injury. The indictment in plain terms charges that A. B. Fisher, in White County, Arkansas, on the 12th day of April, 1923, feloniously pretended to W. J. Shiver that he, the said A. B. Fisher, was the authorized agent of the Columbia Hardwood Lumber Company of Chicago, Ill., to purchase, receive and pay for lumber for it.

The indictment further charges that the said A. B. Fisher proposed to purchase from W. J. Shiver seven carloads of lumber, of the value of $2,300, and, by reason of said false pretense, obtained from said W. J. Shiver the seven carloads of lumber, with the felonious intent to defraud the said W. J. Shiver out of his property.

The indictment further charges the fact to be that the said defendant was not then and there the authorized agent of the said Columbia Hardwood Lumber Company of Chicago, Ill.,, to purchase, receive and pay for lumber for it, and that0 the said defendant well knew that he was not such agent at the time he made the false pretense aforesaid. The statement that the defendant knew his representations of agency to be false embraces the charge that it was so in fact. The words, “that he knew his representations to be false at the time he made them,” fixed the venue of the offense; because, in another part of the indictment, it charges that the representations were made in White County, Arkansas.

The indictment also charges that the defendant made the false pretense in question to induce the prosecuting witness to part with his property, and that the alleged false pretense was effectual for that purpose. Hence the facts charged to constitute false pretenses are stated with sufficient certainty to apprise the defendant of what facts would he necessary for him to prove in his defense.

It is further claimed that, as the indictment fails to specifically charge loss or damage to Shiver, it is fatally defective. We think the offense, under the statute, is complete when a thing of value has been obtained knowingly and designedly from another by false pretenses, with an intent to defraud such person of such property, and that it is unnecessary to 'Charge or prove an actual pecuniary loss or damage. The prosecuting witness was legally injured when he surrendered his property on account of the false representations made to him by the defendant in order to obtain it. The obtaining of the property of Shiver by means of false pretenses constituted the offense, and it was unnecessary to charge that the defendant did not pay for the lumber in question. The crime, if any, was complete when the property was fraudulently obtained. West v. State (Neb.), 88 N. W. 503, and Stoltz v. People (Col.), 148 Pac. 865.

It is also insisted that there is a variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proof. It is insisted that the indictment charges the defendant with obtaining the lumber mentioned under false pretenses, while the proof shows that the defendant never obtained it; but that, if any person or ¡corporation obtained it, it was the Columbia Hardwood Company, of which the defendant was the agent.

We do not think that this assignment of error is well taken. It is evident from the testimony that, if anyone made false and fraudulent representations amounting to false pretenses and obtained the lumber by reason thereof, it was the defendant. If he made the representations, he made them with the.knowledge of their falsity, and the plea of agency is not available to one who knowingly commits a crime. In such cases it is sufficient if the defendant either obtained the possession or control of the goods, or that such goods were delivered to another at his request or in accordance with his wishes. Our statute does not make it an element of the' offense of obtaining money or property under false pretenses that it shall be obtained for the person making the pretenses himself, or that it should be intended- to obtain it for another. The statute provides that every person, who, with the intent to defraud another, shall, by color of any false token or writing, or by any other false pretense, obtain personal property, upon conviction shall bé deemed guilty of larceny, and shall be punished accordingly. The statute is directed against whomsoever shall obtain money or property by false pretenses, and it does not make any difference who gets the money or property. State v. Balliet, 63 Kan. 707, 66 Pac. 1005; Musgrave v. State, 133 Ind. 297, 32 N. E. 885; State v. Chingren, 105 Ia. 169, 74 N. W. 946; and State v. Mendenhall, 24 Wash. 12, 63 Pac. 1109.

It is next insisted that the evidence is not legally sufficient to warrant a verdict of guilty; but we are of the opinion that the proof in this case, on the part of the State, brings it clearly within the doctrine of the cases cited. The statements and representations made by the defendant to Shiver to induce him to part with his lumber were representations of existing fapts. They consisted of positive assertions of existing facts or conditions which were known, by him to be false, and which were made with the intent to influence the action of the prosecuting witness and to induce him to refrain from any particular investigation of the subject to which they related, and to induce him to part with his. property upon the faith that the defendant was the agent of the Columbia Hardwood Lumber Company of Chicago, Ill.

According to the evidence on the part of the State, we have a case where a person, by falsely pretending to be the purchasing agent of a regular established lumber dealer, fraudulently procured another lumber dealer to sell him lumber. Shiver was induced to part with his property upon the representations of the defendant that he was the agent of the Columbia Hardwood Lumber Company of Chicago, Ill. Then, upon the faith of such representations, Shiver looked up the rating of that ■company, and, when he found it to be good, he sold the lumber to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 858, 161 Ark. 586, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-state-ark-1923.