Harrison v. State

147 N.E. 650, 112 Ohio St. 429, 112 Ohio St. (N.S.) 429, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 267, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 315
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1925
Docket18780
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 650 (Harrison 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
Harrison v. State, 147 N.E. 650, 112 Ohio St. 429, 112 Ohio St. (N.S.) 429, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 267, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 315 (Ohio 1925).

Opinion

Marshall, C. J.

Dwight Harrison was indicted and tried by the court of common pleas of Franklin county for violation of Section 13175, General Code, as follows:

“Whoever knowingly makes or publishes, or permits or causes to be made or published, a book, prospectus, notice, report, statement, exhibit or other publication of or concerning the affairs, financial condition or property of a corporation, joint stock association, copartnership or individual, containing a statement which is false or willfully exaggerated and intended to deceive any person as to the real value of any shares, bonds, or property or part thereof, of said corporation, joint stock association, copartnership or individual, shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than ten thousand dollars or imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than one year nor more than five years, or both.”

The indictment alleges that Harrison was an officer of the R. L. Dollings Company, an Ohio corporation handling stock of certain subsidiary corporations, and that as such officer offered for sale to the general public in Franklin county the preferred stock of the Phoenix Portland Cement Company, another Ohio corporation, and a subsidiary of the R. L. Dollings Company, and that the R. L. Dollings Company, through its officers *432 and agents, sold to the general public stock of said subsidiary corporation in the amount of $2,253,600.

The indictment further alleges that the said Harrison, within said county and state, from the 22d of September, 1922, and at divers other times between September 22, 1922, and March 31,1923, as an officer and agent of the E. L. Bollings Company, and for the purpose of promoting the sale of the preferred stock of said subsidiary corporation, “did then and there unlawfully and knowingly make, publish, and permit, and cause to be made and published, orally and in print, certain false statements, to wit, that the Phoenix Portland Cement Company, subsidiary corporation, as aforesaid, then and there owned a certain cement manufacturing plant at Nazareth in the state of Pennsylvania, and a certain cement property at Birmingham in the state of Alabama, whereas, in truth and in fact the said the Phoenix Portland Cement Company, subsidiary corporation as aforesaid, did not then and there own a certain cement manufacturing plant at Nazareth in. the state of Pennsylvania or any cement property at Birmingham in the state of Alabama, which said statements as to the ownership of said plant and property were false and intended to deceive purchasers of said preferred stock- of said the Phoenix Portland Oement Company, subsidiary corporation as aforesaid, as to the real value of said preferred shares of stock and said statements did then and there deceive one Lena L. Shadrach as to the true value of said preferred stock,” and that thereupon she purchased a portion of said stock.

*433 The indictment contains a further count differing from the former only in omitting to allege that the statements were false, and containing the allegation that they were willfully exaggerated.

The defendant was adjudged to be guilty in the trial court, the judgment was affirmed in the Court of Appeals, and a motion for leave to file petition in error in this court was allowed.

The first of the legal questions presented for determination in this court relates to the taking and use on behalf of the state of the deposition of one L. C. Morton, of Philadelphia. Upon this point it is urged, first, that the statute providing the procedure for taking a deposition in a criminal case is unconstitutional, as being in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution, as being a denial of due process and the equal protection of the laws; second, that the court in ordering the deposition to be taken and in providing the procedure therefor has not followed the mandates of the statute, in that it was not made to appear that the attendance of the witness whose deposition was to be taken could not be had at the trial.

Upon the first of these contentions it is sufficient to say at this time that, in the case of Morton v. State, 105 Ohio St., 366, 138 N. E., 45, it was decided that an amendment to the existing statutes was attempted, and that the amendments were unconstitutional and void, and was further decided that the repealing clause of the amendment was unconstitutional, and therefore inoperative, the effect of which was to leave the original enactment as valid provisions relating to the taking *434 of depositions in criminal cases. That question having- been recently decided by this court, we do not feel impelled at this time to further review the validity of that statute, but on the contrary will sustain the validity of those sections upon inferences which may be logically drawn from the second syllabus of that case.

Upon the second contention it is only urged that the dissenting opinion of Wanamaker, J., in the Morton case argues that a deposition may not be talien or used unless there is a finding of the court that the witness cannot be had at the trial. While no issue was taken upon that point by other members of this court, it does not appear that the dissenting opinion had any support among the other members, and that dissenting opinion cannot therefore be a potent authority for the conclusions reached. Our answer to this proposition is that, inasmuch as it appears by the application of the prosecuting attorney that the witness whose deposition was to be taken resides out of the state of Ohio and in the state of Pennsylvania, all courts in Ohio will take judicial notice that compulsory attendance of such witness cannot be obtained in any case, civil or criminal, in the state of Ohio. It therefore sufficiently appears, not only in the application, but also in the entry of the court ordering the deposition to be taken, that the said Lindley O. Morton is a material witness in behalf of the state, and that he resides without the state.

The record discloses that, when the deposition of Morton was taken in Philadelphia, counsel for Harrison appeared and cross-examined. There is *435 no claim in this case that the defendant was indigent, or unable to defray the expense of going to Philadelphia in person, or of employing the services and defraying the expenses of counsel in going to Philadelphia to cross-examine the witness. If any irregularity had been shown, it is impossible that the same could be prejudicial under the circumstances. We are of the opinion, however, that the statute is constitutional, and that it was fairly complied with, and that no error is shown upon this assignment.

The next assignment of error we shall consider relates to the indictment itself. Counsel filed a motion to quash and also a general demurrer challenging the sufficiency of the indictment because the accused was charged with having made a “willfully exaggerated” statement concerning certain property. This challenge reaches directly to the constitutionality of Section 13175, General Code, as to that part thereof which makes it a penal offense to make a “willfully exaggerated” statement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 650, 112 Ohio St. 429, 112 Ohio St. (N.S.) 429, 3 Ohio Law. Abs. 267, 1925 Ohio LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-state-ohio-1925.