People v. Cuykendall

3 N.Y. Crim. 312
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.Y. Crim. 312 (People v. Cuykendall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Cuykendall, 3 N.Y. Crim. 312 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Sunderlin, J.

Section 529 of the Penal Code is as follows : “ A person, who willfully, with intent to defraud, by [314]*314color or aid of a check or draft, or order for the payment of money, or the delivery of property, when such person knows that the drawer or maker thereof is not entitled to draw on the drawee for the sum specified therein, or to order the pay ment of the amount, or delivery of the property, although no express representation is made in reference thereto, obtains from another any money or property, is guilty of stealing the same, and punishable accordingly.”

Section 531 provides that, A person is guilty of grand larceny in the second degree who, under circumstances, not amounting to grand larceny in the first degree, in any manner specified in this chapter, steals or unlawfully obtains or appropriates :

1. Property of the value of more than $25.00, &c.”

To make the defendant guilty of grand larceny in the second degree, under these two sections, it must appear, that he willfully, with intent to defraud, by color or aid of the check in question, obtained delivery of the potatoes from Howard to him.

The undisputed evidence shows that the purchase and delivery of the potatoes were prior to the making of the check, and no time having been fixed by the terms of the sale, when they were to be paid for, the pay for them was due immediately upon delivery, and had the defendant refused to pay, the complainant might have reclaimed and taken possession of them ; and had the defendant given the complainant or his agent a check for them, and the check had been accepted, without the defendant informing him of the condition of his bank account, or his financial condition, when he knew he was not entitled to draw upon the bank for that amount, I think the case would clearly have been made out. But the case on the part of the people falls far short of this. The potatoes had been delivered at the place agreed upon, their amount and value ascertained, and the complainant had the right to demand immediate payment ; but he did not do this, he not only accepts a check on the bank, post-dated to January, 26, which of itself was at least a strong intimation that the defendant had not at the time of making the check, sufficient funds in the bank to pay it, but he received the check accompanied by the defendant’s statement [315]*315that he did not want it presented until the following Monday, as he had bought a quantity of dried plums, and that made him a little short, and that he had paper out that he expected to get some money on,” referring undoubtedly to the drafts drawn by him on the parties in Mew York.

To constitute a crime under section 529, the giving of the check must have been done l( willfully, with intent to defraud,” and how can this be said of the defendant ? He informed the complainant’s agent of the true state of his bank account, and from such information the agent testified, that he judged from defendant’s remarks that he had very little money in the bank, or if he had money there, he desired to use it some other way; that when he took the check, from what was said he' did not expect there was money enough at the bank to pay it.” This evidence was given by the prosecution, or rather was drawn out on cross-examination of the people’s main witness—the agent himself, and ■ it is nowhere contradicted, or its force in, any way weakened.

The mere giving a check by a person upon a bank, at which he has no deposit or credit to pay, does not constitute a crime under section 529, but the giving of the check must be with a willful intent to defraud, and there is not the slightest evidence in this case of any such intent, or from which fraud could be imputed or surmised.

The section is a new one in our criminal law, and undoubtedly was intended to make the giving of a check, &c., when the person giving it “ knows that the drawer or maker thereof is not entitled to draw on the drawee for the sum specified therein, although no express representation is made in reference thereto,” tantamount to a representation, that the drawer of such check is entitled to draw on the drawee for the sum specified ; or in other words, that the silence of the party making and delivering such check amounts to a declaration that he has money in the bank upon which he draws to pay it; and in the absence of explanatory proof, such silence may be taken and presuméd as a willful intent to defraud. But when the drawer of such check notifies the party receiving it, at the time of its delivery, that he has not sufficient funds in bank to pay it, no such presumption of fraud can arise.

[316]*316It is t\o fraudulent concealment-oí the impoverished condition of the drawer’s bank account, that constitutes the crime under section 529, and not the truthful disclosure of its condition. If A. says to B., I will give you $200.00 for your horse if you will deliver him at my stable to-morrow, and B. says, I will do it, and on the next day delivers the horse at the stable and goes to A.’s office and informs him of the delivery and demands his pay, and thereupon A. draws his check upon a bank for the amount and delivers it to B. with the statement that he has not a dollar in the bank, but that he has paper coming due him at the batik the following week, from which he expects money to meet the check, and B. receives the check upon this statement, and the paper of A. is not paid at maturity, the check consequently not met, there is no fraud, no crime on the part of A. The transaction amounts to nothing more or less, than B. waiving immediate payment, which he had the right to demand and insist upon, and relying upon the credit and responsibility of A. for the purchase price of the horse.

The same principle applies in this case. When the complainant’s agent accepted of the defendant a post-dated chedk, with the information that there was not sufficient funds of his at the bank upon which it'was drawn to pay it, and that he had paper out that he expected to get money on, the transaction was simply waiving the right of the complainant to have his pay or his property in immediately, and extending the time of payment upon the credit and responsibility of the defendant— especially as the information was true and not false or fraudulent.

So far as I am advised, this is a new question under this new section of the Penal Code; but to me its meaning is so plain as to render it unnecessary to cite authorities upon abstract or other principles of law, for the purpose of properly construing it.

The case is barren of any of the elements of crime or criminal intent, and the defendant must be discharged from custody.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. Crim. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cuykendall-nycountyct-1885.