Jules v. State

36 A. 1027, 85 Md. 305, 1897 Md. LEXIS 42
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 31, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 36 A. 1027 (Jules v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jules v. State, 36 A. 1027, 85 Md. 305, 1897 Md. LEXIS 42 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City on the charge of obtaining money under false pretences. Availing himself of the provisions of the Code, Art. 27, sec. 288, he demanded a statement of the false pretences intended to be given in evidence together with the names of the witnesses This demand was complied with by the State’s Attorney. It appears by the record that a demurrer was filed, but it is not stated whether to the indictment or the bill of particulars. We think, however, that it clearly appears from an examination of the docket entries that the demurrer was directed entirely to the bill of particulars, and did not and could not have involved the indictment except upon the theory that the former was part and parcel of the latter. The docket entries are as follows;

"April 13th, 1896, Demand for Bill of Particulars.

April 15th, “ Bill of Particulars filed by State’s Attorney.

April 26th, 1896, Demurrer entered short.

Sept. 29th, “ Demurrer sustained.

Sept. 29th, “ Motion in open Court by State’s Attorney for leave to file Amended Bill of Particulars.”

Same day, Objections to motion made in open Court by counsel for defendant.

Same day, Objection overruled by the Court, and leave granted to the State’s Attorney to file Amended Bill of Particulars.

Sept. 29th, 1896, Amended Bill of Particulars filed.

Sept. 29th, 1896, Demurrer entered short.

Same day, Demurrer overruled.

Same day, Special Exceptions overruled.

The fact that when the demurrer was sustained the State’s Attorney immediately filed an amended bill of particulars, the trial was continued and the appellant was convicted and [310]*310sentenced to three years’ confinement in the penitentiary, would seem to be conclusive evidence that the demurrer was, as we have said, to the bill of particulars and not to the indictment. For if a demurrer to the indictment had been sustained as the defendant suggests, it would have been then and there quashed, and it would have been folly to file an amended bill of particulars or proceed further with the trial. It was contended, but we. can hardly suppose seriously, that the demurrer to the indictment having been sustained the judgment on the first demurrer, in favor of the defendant being final and the appellant being entitled to his discharge, all the subsequent proceedings were without authority and absolutely void. But it would require more cogent proof than we have found in the record to induce us to believe that the learned Judge below would permit, or the State’s Attorney would adopt, a course so preposterous and unwarranted, as to proceed with the trial and conviction of the defendant after the indictment had been found insufficient. It would also follow if the indictment had been or ought to have been quashed that the learned counsel for the defendant would have been remiss in his duty to his client in allowing him, without objection, so far as the record shows, to be tided on an indictment which the Court had declared insufficient in law. But we think the indictment was not only not demurred to', but we are all of opinion that a demurrer to it could not have been sustained. It is similar in form to the indictment in Carnell's case decided at last October term, ante, p. i, in which we held that the indictment there considered was in the usual form and free from objection.

2. If then we are correct in saying the indictment is good, the next question to be considered is whether there is any foundation for the objections which have been so earnestly urged against the bill of particulars. The Code provides, Art. 27, sec. 288, that in any indictment for false pretences it should not be necessary to state the particular false pretences intended to be relied on, but the defendant, on appli[311]*311cation to the State’s Attorney before trial, shall be entitled to the names of the witnesses, and a statement of the false pretences intended to be given in evidence. Section 291 of the same Article provides that in the trial of any of the offenses mentioned in that section, obtaining any property by false pretences being one of them, it shall not be necessary to prove an intent on the part of the defendant to defraud any particular person, but it shall be sufficient to prove that the defendant did the act charged, with an intent to defraud. Does the statement of particulars, as amended, comply with the provisions of sections 288 and 291 ? We think clearly it does. Without quoting it at length it is sufficient to say that it alleges that the appellant, with intent to defraud, falsely represented himself to the prosecutor as a physician possessing extraordinary and supernatural powers to cure certain infirmities, and particularly that he could cure and would cure the prosecutor of a certain malady from which he was then suffering, and that further to induce him to part with a certain sum of money the defendant delivered to him a written guarantee by the terms of which the defendant was to refund the said sum of money if a permanent and total cure was not effected within a certain number of days, whereas in truth and in fact the defendant was not a physician with the powers he claimed to have nor could he effect the cure; but all his representations were false and he absconded before the time stipulated for the cure of the prosecutor. It is also alleged that by these false representations the prosecutor was induced to part with his money. What is said in this bill of particulars it appears to us is equivalent to alleging that the defendant said to the prosecutor: “I now have or am possessed of extraordinary and supernatural powers to cure you. I can and I will cure you.” This is undoubtedly a representation as to an existing fact. The alleged existing fact, is that he then and there had the supernatural and extraordinary power to cure in the manner he claimed. In other words the defendant is alleged to have said in effect, “ I have the [312]*312power, I have it now. I will exert that power in the future to cure you.” This, it was contended, amounts only to “ a future promise,” or a promise to cure in the future. But it is apparent that there is a false representation as well as a promise — a false representation of an existing fact and a promise to cure in the future. “ It would be difficult to find in actual life any case wherein a man parted with his property on a mere representation of fact whether true or false, without an accompanying promise. If, therefore, we look at the promise simply as a nullity, it does not impair the simultaneous false pretence, considered as the foundation for an indictment.” 2 Bishop's New Criminal Law, sec. 424. And the same learned author says, “ Nor does it matter that a promise by the accused operated as a part of the inducement under which the prosecutor parted with his property. The consequence attached to the false representation was not overthrown by the promise.” Ib. sec. 461. We think, however, it is needless to pursue this question further, for the bill of particulars, as amended, appears free from objection.

3. But if it had been otherwise the objection could not have been availed of by demurrer. The office of a bill of particulars like this is, first, to inform the defendant of the names of the witnesses the State expects to call, and, secondly, to furnish him with a statement of the false pretences intended to be relied on and given in evidence. Art. 27, sec. 288.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 A. 1027, 85 Md. 305, 1897 Md. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jules-v-state-md-1897.