People v. Dickie

17 N.Y.S. 51, 10 N.Y. Crim. 123, 42 St. Rep. 888, 69 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 400, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 888, 62 Hun 400, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 573
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 N.Y.S. 51 (People v. Dickie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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. Dickie, 17 N.Y.S. 51, 10 N.Y. Crim. 123, 42 St. Rep. 888, 69 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 400, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 888, 62 Hun 400, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 573 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinions

Barrett, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of forgery in the second degree. The gist of the offense was the unauthorized filling in of a blank check intrusted to him by his employers. The material facts, as testi[52]*52fled to by the complainant, Oscar M. Crego, were these: Dickie was the cashier of the firm of Russell Crego & Son. As such cashier, he had been for two or three years intrusted with 12 checks, signed by the firm, and.payable to his own order, but undated and blank as to amount. When one or more of these checks was used, its place was supplied, so that Dickie always had 12 such checks on hand for immediate use. These 12 checks were detached from tile check-book, and were kept by Dickie in the money-drawer. Dickie’s authority with regard to the use of these checks was peculiar. He was authorized always to pay the drafts of an agent of the firm at Elgin, 111.; also, those of a party in Chautauqua county. He was also authorized to pay the freight-bills of the different transportation companies in this city. For these payments, he was authorized to use the checks in question without any special direction from the firm. For all other payments, however, he was limited to a special direction. He was not authorized to use any of these checks for the payment of current expenses, or for the purpose of obtaining cash for current expenses, or for the payment or liquidation of any claims. When money was required for the payment of employes or other cash items, the custom was, when the money in the drawer was insufficient, for Dickie to draw a special check for the requisite amount, payable to “ W. F. Dickie, Currency,” and bring it (still in the check-book, and attached to the stub) to Mr. Crego to be signed. The custom also was, when any one of the 12 checks was used to pay drafts or other obligations of the firm, for Dickie to date such check, fill in the precise amount of the draft or other obligation, and then indorse it, payable to the order of the creditor of the firm. Upon the 28th of September, 1889, Dickie took one of these 12 checks, dated it, filled it up for $225, inserted the word “currency” after his own name, so that, in place of reading, “Pay to W. F. Dickie or order,” it read, “Pay to W. F. Dickie, Currency, or order,” indorsed it in blank, and obtained the money therefor at the bank.

The question is, was this a forgery of the check? The' rule has long been well settled in England that an unauthorized filling up of blanks in checks, notes, acceptances, and such like instruments of a commercial character, amounts to forgery. In Reg. v. Hart, 7 Car. & P. 652, the prisoner was given an acceptance, blank as to amount, with authority to fill it in for £200. He filled it in for £500. This was held to be forgery, and upon the point being reserved the conviction was sustained by all the English judges. In Reg. v. Bateman, 1 Cox, Crim. Cas. 186, it was said that where a check is given with a certain limited authority the agent is confined strictly within the limits of that authority, and that if he fills in the check with a different amount from that authorized, or if, after the authority is at an end, he fills it witli any amount whatever, it is clearly forgery. The doctrine of Reg. v. Hart was followed in Reg. v. Wilson, 2 Car. & K. 527. There the prisoner was authorized to fill in the amount due on a bill for £150 and interest, then to get the check cashed and pay the bill. Instead of doing this, he filled in £250, and retained part of the proceeds, claiming that it was due him for salary. This was held to be forgery. Where the authority is general a different rule prevails. Thus, in Reg. v. Richardson, 2 Fost. & F. 343, the clerk had authority to draw checks upon his employer’s bank, not only to the order of the creditors of the firm, but to his own order, for such sums as he deemed necessary to pay the cash disbursements of the business. Upon one occasion he drew a check to his own order for £11, the proceeds of which he appropriated. He was acquitted of forgery, and put on trial for embezzlement; the learned judge observing that the prisoner “could not be convicted of forgery, inasmuch as, having a general authority to draw, he did not necessarily exceed his authority when he drew the check, and that the criminal act, if any, was the subsequent appropriation of it.” In that case, however, the distinction is observed, in the statement of facts, that the clerk was not bound [53]*53always to draw the checks in favor of a particular creditor, but had authority to draw generally, and pay the creditor with cash. In the case at bar the jury were authorized to credit Mr. Crego’s testimony, and to find thereon that Dickie had no authority to draw generally, and to pay the creditor with the proceeds of the check so drawn, but that his authority was strictly limited to drawing in favor of each particular creditor for his particular bill; that is, to pay each creditor only by check and to fill in such check only the amount of such creditor’s bill. There was in reality no general authority. It is true the special authority was not limited to one creditor, or to one specified amount. But there is no distinction in the principle upon which deviations from specific authority are held to be forgeries. The special authority here extended over several subjects, but each subject stood by itself, and the limitation as to each was clear and well defined. There was no authority, either general or special, which authorized Dickie, for any purpose whatever, to fill in any one of these 12 checks with a single dollar, except to pay the draft or bill of some one of the specified persons or corporations; none, certainly, to fill in a single dollar for his own purposes.

In the very able brief which Mr. Closson submits in behalf of the defendant, he makes this claim: “It is not necessary to argue that forgery can only be committed with a pen, or some similar instrument, and that unless the prosecution can point to some writing on this check, and say that that particular writing in some way added to or altered the legal effect of the check, and that the words or figures so written were words or figures Dickie’s pen had no right to put there, Dickie did not forge the check, whatever he did with the proceeds.” We agree with this view of the case, but we think the prosecution had a right to go to the jury upon the proposition that the words “two hundred and twenty-five dollars” were words which Dickie’s pen had no right to put in this particular check. There was no draft or bill before him for that amount at the time he inserted those words. Their insertion was wholly outside of the authority conferred. Even if a draft from the Illinois agent for $200 had been before him, his authority was limited to that specific sum; and if he had inserted $225, with a view to misappropriating the surplus, he would have been guilty of forgery. Is he any the less guilty if he inserts the $225 without any bill being before him, and appropriates the whole amount? There was no general authority as to amount, any more than there was as to individuáis. The amount was limited to the face of each draft or bill presented; neither more nor less. And the general authority to pay drafts or bills of these particular persons was limited to payment in one particular way, and in that only, namely, by filling in one of the 12 checks the exact amount called for, and delivering such check, properly indorsed, to the creditor. Thus the authority conferred was the same in substance as a special authority to pay each of several persons a varying but liquidated amount, and to so pay it in a manner involving a purely clerical act.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.Y.S. 51, 10 N.Y. Crim. 123, 42 St. Rep. 888, 69 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 400, 42 N.Y. St. Rep. 888, 62 Hun 400, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dickie-nysupct-1891.