People v. Bibby

27 P. 781, 91 Cal. 470, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1112
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1891
DocketNo. 20798
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 27 P. 781 (People v. Bibby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Bibby, 27 P. 781, 91 Cal. 470, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1112 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

Garoutte, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction for the crime of forgery, and also* from the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The defendant was the deputy county superintendent of schools of Fresno County, and the information charged him with forging, uttering, and passing, with intent to defraud the First National Bank of Fresno, a certain writing of the following tenor, to wit: —

“ Order upon the county superintendent of public schools No. 3, October 23, 1889.
The county superintendent of public schools of Fresno County will draw a requisition on the county auditor against the county school fund, in favor of B. N. Colwell, or order, to the amount of $120, for material and work from-= to-, during the present school year, in the Pleasant Valley school district, monthly salary of teacher, $-.
“ T.'T. Barnes,
“ J. W. Cox,
School Trustees of Pleasant Valley District. “ $120.”

[473]*473The defendant filed a demurrer to the information upon various grounds, which demurrer was overruled; he also moved an arrest of judgment for the same reasons, which motion was denied.

Section 470 of the Penal Code is very broad in its terms, and we think sufficiently broad to include the offense of forging an order of the trustees of a school district upon the county superintendent of schools for a requisition upon the auditor for a county warrant.

Appellant contends that the order is illegal upon its face, for the reason that it does not appear by the information that it was accompanied by a bill of items; that sucli an order is worthless paper, save for the purpose of forming a foundation upon which to issue a requisition to the auditor for a county warrant; and that no requisition could issue in this case, because the order was not accompanied by a bill of items. Section 1543, subdivision 3, of the Political Code, in stating the duties of the county superintendent of schools, provides, among other things: “No requisition shall be drawn unless the money is in the fund to pay it; and no requisition shall be drawn upon the order of the board of trustees against the county fund of any district, except for teachers’ salaries, unless such order is accompanied by an itemized bill showing the separate items, and the price of each, in payment for which the order is drawn,” etc. Appellant’s contention cannot be supported. The case at bar in this regard bears a striking likeness to the Hawkeswood case (2 East P. C. 955.) Hawkeswood was indicted for forgery of a bill of exchange, and objection was taken, that, not being stamped, it was no bill of exchange, and that this was an objection apparent upon the face of it; and no person could be deceived or defrauded thereby, unless he took it without looking at it, which would be gross negligence. The court held that as the stamp act was merely a revenue law, and did not purport in any way to alter the crime of forgery, and as the false instrument had the semblance of a bill of exchange, and was negotiated by the person as such, [474]*474the conviction was proper. The judgment being respited, all the judges were of opinion that “the prisoner was properly convicted; for the stamp act, in saying that a bill without a stamp shall not be pleaded or given in evidence, or available in law or equity, means only that it shall not be made use of to recover the debt, and besides, the holder might get it stamped after it was made.” In Commonwealth v. Costello, 120 Mass. 367, where the defendant was charged with forging a bond to be used for the purpose of dissolving an attachment, the court held that an instrument falsely made with intent to. de.fraud is a forgery, although if it had been genuine, other steps must have been taken before the instrument would have been perfected, and those steps weré not taken. It was contended that the bond was worthless upon its face, as it was not approved, and until approved, could not serve to dissolve the attachment. The court said: “ It is true that the false making of an instrument merely frivolous, or one which upon its face is clearly void, is not forgery, because .from its character it could not have operated to defraud, or been intended for that purpose; but if the instrument is one made with intent to defraud, although before it can have effect other steps must be taken, or other proceedings had upon the basis of it, then the false making is a forgery, notwithstanding such steps may never have been taken or proceedings had.” In Ex parte Finley, 66 Cal. 264, the defendant was convicted of forging a decree of divorce, and it was held that the information was sufficient, without averring a marriage of the parties to the forged decree, as “ on its face the writing shows that it may have been used to consummate a fraud.” In People v. Todd, 77 Cal. 464, where the defendant was charged with forging a will, upon demurrer it was held not necessary to state in the indictment that the testator had property that might have been affected by the will. Appellant’s views are not supported by the case of People v. Tomlinson, 35 Cal. 503. The instrument alleged in that case to have been forged was a nudum pactum, and [475]*475so appeared by its face; and after citing many authorities, the court said: “These cases establish the doctrine that, to constitute forgery, the forged instrument must be one which, if genuine, may injure another.” We think the present cause comes clearly within the foregoing rule. The order is a valid order upon its face; it fulfills every requirement of the law, and if genuine, would have a distinct, well-defined value. A bsill of items is no part of the order, and is only required to accompany the order when a requisition is demanded from the county superintendent; at that time, and only at that time, has the bill of items any value. The county superintendent of schools is prohibited from drawing the requisition until there is money in the fund of the school district. The inhibition in this regard is equally as strict as in drawing a requisition without the bill of items; yet, could it be contended that the order of the board of trustees could not be forged because there was no money in the fund? This order is certainly as valid for the purposes of a forgery as a bill of exchange without a stamp, or a bond without the approval of the court. If genuine, it has a value; for if issued by the board of trustees to the proper party without an accompanying bill of items, no reason is apparent why legal proceedings could not be taken by the holder of the order to compel the furnishing of a proper bill by such board in case of a refusal. We conclude that the information was sufficient, the instrument being a valid instrument upon its face, and that it was neither necessary to allege nor prove that a bill of items accompanied the order.

The instrument being valid upon its face, it was not necessary to allege the existence of Pleasant Valley school district, or the fact that T. T. Barnes and J. W. Cox were trustees of such district. In Ex parte Finley, 66 Cal. 264, the court declared that “the rule does not require that the indictment or information shall contain an express allegation of the existence of every fact the existence of which is assumed in the forged instrument. [476]*476It is enough if the writing is one which, if genuine, might apparently be of legal efficacy.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 P. 781, 91 Cal. 470, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bibby-cal-1891.