People v. . Abeel

75 N.E. 307, 182 N.Y. 415, 19 N.Y. Crim. 524, 20 Bedell 415, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 941
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 307 (People v. . Abeel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Abeel, 75 N.E. 307, 182 N.Y. 415, 19 N.Y. Crim. 524, 20 Bedell 415, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 941 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinions

Wemtek, J.:

In the month of October, 1903, a young woman named Eleanor Anderson was employed as a telegraph operator by the Western Hnion Telegraph Company at one of *526 its branch offices in the Grand Hotel in the city of Hew York. The defendant saw her there, was attracted by her and sought an introduction. For the purpose of creating a favorable impression he falsely represented himself to' be J. Ogden Goelet, the son of a wealthy resident of Hew York, and his first step in that direction was to send a telegram to James H. Abeel (himself) signed J. Ogden Goelet, making an appointment at the University Club and asking for an answer at the Grand Hotel. This telegram was delivered to Miss Anderson and transmitted by her. This was followed on the same day by a note from the defendant asking Miss Anderson for the honor of an introduction and apologizing for the method employed to obtain it. Without waiting for a written reply to his note the defendant went to the Grand Hotel and verbally repeated to Miss Anderson his desire to become acquainted with her. In this conversation the defendant suggested that he would try to find some one to give him a letter of introduction. Several days later the defendant again called on Miss Anderson, stating that he had been so fortunate as to attend a dinner at which he had met Mr. Van Every, one of the vice-presidents of the telegraph company, from whom he had obtained a letter of introduction, which was somewhat general and informal because the defendant had desired not to compromise or embarrass Miss Anderson. The defendant then presented the letter, which reads as follows:

“ Hew York, October 31, 1903.

“ To any Employee

“ Western Union Telegraph Company:

This will introduce Mr. J. O. Goelet, a personal friend of the management of this Company. Any favors shown him will be duly appreciated by the corporation and myself.

Yours truly,

“ J. B. VAH EVEEY,

2nd Vice-President

*527 The presentation of this letter was followed by a series of visits and attentions on the part of the defendant, in the course of which he artfully strengthened the deception that he was a member of the prominent Goelet family, with the result that he proposed marriage to Miss Anderson on the Monday following their first meeting, was accepted on Tuesday, and the wedding day set for the ensuing Thursday. Meanwhile arrangements were made for the consummation of the marriage ; the defendant gave Miss Anderson a check for $100,000, drawn on the Astor National Bank, signed George B. De Witt, Co-trustee,” and indorsed “ J. Ogden Goelet.” On the wedding day the defendant appeared at the home of Miss Anderson, gave her a marriage ring and then, upon the pretext of going down stairs to attend an interview with newspaper reporters, he surreptitiously departed from the house never to return. This is a bare outline of the events that led to the arrest, indictment and conviction of the defendant upon the charge of forgery in the third degree.

The statute under which the defendant was indicted and convicted is subdivision 3 of section 514 of the Penal Code which, so far as pertinent to the case at bar, provides that “ a person who . . . shall alter, or who shall cause, aid, abet, or otherwise connive at, or be a party to the uttering of any letter, telegram, report or other written communication, paper or instrument purporting to have been written or signed by another person, . . . which said letter, telegram, report or other written communication, paper or instrument . . as aforesaid, the person uttering the same shall know to be false, forged or counterfeited, and by the uttering of which the sentiments, opinions, conduct, character, prospects, interests or rights of such other person shall be misrepresented or otherwise injuriously affected ... is guilty of forgery in the third degree.”

*528 The case rests entirely upon the facts' established by the prosecution, as the defendant introduced no evidence. Thus the broad question presented by this appeal is whether these uncontroverted facts constitute the crime of forgery as defined in the statute above quoted. The most obvious feature of this . statute is that it adds to the list of forgeries several that were not known to the common law or to our statutes as they existed prior to 1884. And since it is beyond dispute that the act charged against the defendant is1 not one that would have constituted the- crime of forgery under the common law or" the earlier statutes, it is evident that it will not be profitable to discuss the cases decided under the law as it then stood. The power of the legislature to designate as statutory offenses acts that were lawful and innocent at common law is not challenged by the defense and, indeed, is too well established to permit of doubt or discussion at this late day. We proceed, therefore, directly to the discussion of the statute and its bearing upon the ¡act charged against the defendant. And here we are confronted with the difficulty that always exists when the technicalities of legal reasoning are brought to bear upon simple English. The able and ingenious arguments of counsel admirably illustrate the possibilities in this direction, but when we get away from the briefs and look at the letter of the 'statute, it seems so plainly designed to cover just such a case as the one before us, that it is like carrying coals to Newcastle to demonstrate . it. The act committed by the defendant, and charged in the indictment-, was the uttering of a letter containing the false representation that the defendant was Hr. J. O. Goelet, a friend of the management of the Western Union Telegraph Company, and bespeaking for him the favors of its employees. This letter purported to have been signed by J. B. Van Every, one of the vieeqpresidents of .that company. It was used to deceive a young woman, one of the employees of the company, into believing that the defendant was a young man whose financial *529 and social position made him a most desirable acquaintance and the result of that belief was that he was permitted to become a most welcome suitor. The record does not clearly disclose by what Providential interference this insidious and dastardly attempt upon the honor and happiness of a young woman was intercepted just at the point of culmination, nor is it necessary that we should know, because the criminality of the defendant’s act in uttering the letter in question depends wholly upon other considerations. That the letter was a falsehood from beginning to end, and that the use of Van Every’s name thereon was unauthorized, is beyond dispute. ' That it thoroughly misrepresented ,any opinion or sentiment harbored by Van Every, or conduct indulged in by him towards the defendant is clear, for it imputed to the supposed writer an acquaintance with the defendant as Hr. J. O. Goelet and a desire to introduce him in that capacity to the employees of the telegraph company, when in fact Van Every did not know him .at all.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 307, 182 N.Y. 415, 19 N.Y. Crim. 524, 20 Bedell 415, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-abeel-ny-1905.