People v. Helmer

13 A.D. 426, 43 N.Y.S. 642, 12 N.Y. Crim. 134
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 A.D. 426 (People v. Helmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Helmer, 13 A.D. 426, 43 N.Y.S. 642, 12 N.Y. Crim. 134 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Follett, J.:

On the first trial, the defendant’s counsel requested the court to charge that the evidence was insufficient to justify a verdict mat the defendant knew that there' were false, forged or altered entries in the discount book or in the draft register when they were exhibited to the bank examiner, which requests were refused, and because of the refusal a new trial was granted.

On the trial under review a conviction- was sought solely on the ground that the defendant knowingly exhibited to- the bank examiner the teller’s tickler or cash book, containing false entries in respect to the amount of currency on hand. The question whether other false, forged or altered books or papers were-exhibited by the defendant to the bank examiner was withdrawn from the jury. To convict the defendant on the issue submitted to the jury it was neces[429]*429sary to establish: (1) That the entries in the teller’s tickler were false; (2) that the defendant knew that the entries were false; (3) that the defendant exhibited the teller’s tickler to the bank examiner.

The teller’s tickler or cash book was kept by the teller, and purported to show the amount of cash, coin and currency on hand at the close of every day’s business. Under the head of the abbreviation “ Oy.” (denoting currency) there should have been carried only national bank notes and United States notes. The following is a copy of the entry in the teller’s tickler, which purported to show the amount of coin, currency and items carried as cash in the bank at the close of business on September 20, 1893 :

“ Exhibit Uo. 5.
September 20, 1893.
Oy......................'................... $14,620 00
$380 00
F. ctl............................ 7 65
15 85
--- 403 50
G-old.................. $2,364 00
Silver V.......................... 800 00
Silver O......................... 170 00
Dimes............................ 160 00
- 3,494 00
$5 00
78 00
78 92
4 00
4 30
• 25 00
15 25
'--210 47
$18,727 97
Over______■........................ ...$14 90
Exch............................ 7 52
-:-- 22 42
$18,705 55
18,705 62
$ .07"

[430]*430When the bank opened for business on the morning of September 21, 1893, the teller’s tickler showed that there was then on hand in the hank $18,705.55 in cash, of which sum $14,620 was represented to be currency, and was entered in the teller’s tickler as follows : “ Oy., $14,620.00,”

In fact, there was on hand only the sum of $7,620 in currency, the remainder ($7,000) being represented by two checks, one for $4,000 and one for $3,000, drawn by Arnold'as county treasurer in favor of the Merchants’ Bank of Lockport, on banks in which the county was supposed to have funds to its credit. These checks were not produced on the trial, and although the one for $3,000 had been carried as a cash item since the bank was incorporated, and the one for $4,000 since July 5, 1893, neither the president, cashier nor the teller was able to tell on what banks they were drawn, but all agreed that they were never presented to the drawees, and were not intended to be. That the entry “ Cy., $14,620,” did not state the amount of currency on hand is apparent, and that the entry was false was established by the most convincing evidence, and, indeed, was not denied by the defendant, who testified in his own behalf on the trial. It is urged by the defendant’s counsel that placing $7,000 in the vault of the bank on the morning of September 21,1893, made the entry in the teller’s tickler true in- fact. This act was a mere subterfuge, designed- to conceal the fact that the entry in the book, “ Cy., $14,620.00,” was false; and, besides, the entry did not purport to state the amount of currency in the bank after the transaction of business on the 21st of September, 1893, but the amount of currency in the bank at the close of business September 20, 1893, and the amount of currency in the bank before beginning business on the morning of September 21, 1893.

That the defendant knew that the entry “ Cy.? $14,620.00,” was false is established by his conduct, as testified to by himself. He testified that, when the bank opened for business on the morning of September 21,1893, the bank examiner came in to examine into the condition of the bank, and that he called for the cash. All the cash on hand was brought out, but the two checks, one for $4,000 and the other for $3,000, were not presented, and thereupon the defendant went personally and borrowed $4,000 in currency of the Farmers and Mechanics’ Savings Bank of Lockport and $3,000 in cur[431]*431rency of S. Curtis Lewis, a private banker, which he placed in the vault of the Merchants’ Bank of Lockport without the knowledge of the bank examiner, and then produced it as currency on hand at the close of business, September 20, 1893, and at the beginning of business, September 21, 1893 ; and thus the amount of currency apparently on hand compared with the entry in the teller’s tickler, and as soon as the exanfination of the bank was completed, the defendant, on the. same day, and within two or three hours afterwards, returned the identical bills to the banks from which he had borrowed them. It is difficult to see how, under this state of evidence, the correctness of which is conceded by the defendant, it can be contended that the defendant did not know of the entry in the teller’s tickler, and did not know it to be false.

Did the defendant exhibit this book to the bank examiner ? All the evidence is to the effect that this was one of the regular books of the bank; that the examiner called for the books and the cash; that the defendant was present, and was, indeed, the only executive officer then present, the cashier being absent when the books were produced. It is entirely immaterial whether the defendant personally handed the book to the examiner, or whether it was pointed out by some one of the subordinates in the hank. The fact that the examiner was to examine the teller’s tickler was known to the defendant, as is evinced by his conduct in borrowing, temporarily, sufficient currency to make the entries therein apparently true. The testimony given by and in behalf of the defendant, excluding that given by the People, is sufficient to establish the issue that the defendant knowingly exhibited to the bank examiner the teller’s tickler, which contained a false entry, with intent to deceive the examiner in respect to the financial condition of the bank. (People v. Helmer, 85 Hun, 530.)

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Related

People v. Myers
20 N.Y. Crim. 451 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 A.D. 426, 43 N.Y.S. 642, 12 N.Y. Crim. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-helmer-nyappdiv-1897.