People v. Herzog

19 N.Y. Crim. 371, 47 Misc. 50, 93 N.Y.S. 357
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 N.Y. Crim. 371 (People v. Herzog) 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. Herzog, 19 N.Y. Crim. 371, 47 Misc. 50, 93 N.Y.S. 357 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Crane, J.:

The above defendants have been indicted under section 515 of the Penal Code for forgery in the third degree, in having with intent to defraud, made a false entry in the accounts of a corporation. The indictment alleges that “ on the 5th day of January, 1905, at the Borough of Brooklyn, in the county of Kings, the said Michael D. Herzog and Theodore Jacobson, did, with intent to defraud a municipal corporation, to wit, the City of Hew York, make a false entry in an account, record and writing belonging tO' and appertaining to the business of such municipal corporation, which said account, record and writing is commonly known as and called Foreman’s or Dump Sheet, the same purporting to show the number of loads of snow and ice received from District Ho. 1, Gang Ho. 2, during the day ending at 5 :30 o’clock p. m., January 5, 1905, for and on account of said municipal corporation, that is to say, they the said Michael D. Herzog and Theodore Jacobson did then and there wilfully and with felonious intent to defraud said municipal corporation, enter and caused to be entered in and upon said Foreman’s or Dump Sheet, certain words, figures and letters which purported to certify and declare that on the day and year aforesaid one John Hanna, of Ho. 815 Classon avenue, Brooklyn, had employed in and with said district and gang for and on account of said municipal corporation, five trucks with horses in the removal of snow and ice from the streets of said Borough of Brooklyn, and had with and by means of said five trucks and said horses and with said district and gang removed one hundred and eight loads of snow and ice from the streets of said Borough of Brooklyn for and on account of said, municipal corporation, and that said corporation was then and there, for and on account of said services, justly indebted to the said John Hanna at the rate of seven dollars for each truck so employed by the said John Hanna, as aforesaid, amounting to the sum of thirty-five dollars.” Then follow allegations [373]*373that said entry was false, ■ that no such horses or trucks were employed or used, no such snow removed and the municipality not indebted to John Hanna for any such services, all of which was known to the defendants who made such entries to defraud the city.

This indictment has been demurred to on the ground that the acts charged in the indictment do not constitute a crime, and three defects are specified.

First. It fails to set forth the writing called a Foreman’s or Dump Sheet alleged to have been forged and altered.

Second. It does not contain an allegation that said Foreman’s or Dump Sheet, alleged to have been forged and altered, if genuine, would have created any liability upon the part of the city to pay John Hanna the amount stated therein to be due him or that the city authorities would, if said Dump Sheet had been valid, have paid to John Hanna the amount stated therein as due him or that it was customary for the city authorities to consider the amount stated in said Dump Sheet to be due the various contractors as a valid claim against the city and a claim which it was a practice of the city to pay.

Third. It fails to state the reason for not setting forth the tenor of the instrument alleged to have been forged.

Taking up the second objection first, is there sufficient alleged in the indictment as above set out to show that the Foreman’s or Dump Sheet is an instrument or writing capable of forgery ? Counsel for the defendants claims that forgery can only be committed when the instrument alleged to be forged or altered, would if genuine be a legal or operative instrument. This expression has been used in cases where it appeared upon the face of the indictment and from the copy of the alleged forged instrument that it could not have been valid even if genuine. As said in Cunningham v. People, 4 Hun, 455, “ If the instrument be invalid on its face, it can not be the subject of forgery because it has no legal tendency to effect a fraud.” And by [374]*374Justice Cowen in People v. Thall, 9 Cow. 788, “ void things are as no things.” " And again, “ In all cases the instruments forged were, as far as we can see, apparently available for the purposes intended, to acquire or defeat some right or to work a prejudice, and we have1 seen that in two of the cases the papers not being prejudicial on their face, the defect is supplied by averment or recital showing how they might be made to act injuriously by reason of matter aliunde..” See also People v. Drayton, 168 N. Y. 10; 16 N. Y. Crim. 1. In People v. Stearns, 21 Wend. 409, it was stated that “ The indictment must show the forgery of an instrument which, on being described, appears on its face naturally calculated to work some effect on property; or if it be not complete for that purpose, .some extrinsic matter must be shown whereby the court may judicially see its tendency.”

Wharton in his work on Oriminal Law, after quoting Blackstone’s definition of forgery as “ the making or altering of a writing to the prejudice of another’s rights,” says, “ It is enough if the forged instrument be apparently sufficient to support a legal claim directly or indirectly (§ 691) or can be used as proof either perfect or imperfect in a suit with another.” He expresses the same matter differently in section 739 by saying, “ Unless the instrument forged appears by the indictment to be capable of being used as legal proof at some time or in some way or at some place the indictment is bad.”

False entries in books of accotmt, journals, passbooks of banks and the like, made with intent to defraud, were forgeries at common law. Biles v. Commonwealth, 32 Penn. St. 529; Barnum v. State, 15 Ohio, 717; Reg. v. Smith, 9 Cox, 162; Reg. v. Moody, id. 166. So likewise would it be forgery to make a raise entry with intent t.o defraud in a Foreman’s or Dump Sheet, which was a record or account belonging to the business of a municipal corporation showing the number of loads of snow and ice received for and on account of the city, [375]*375for which it was liable to pay a certain amount per load or for each truck used. All this is alleged in the indictment, and so far as these allegations show, such Dump Sheet might be used to prejudice the city’s rights, or as proof directly or indirectly to support the claim of the person alleging to have received, carted or removed the loads represented by the false entries in the city’s said accounts.

Many of the cases cited by defendant’s counsel are in reference to indictments found under those provisions of the Revised Statutes or the Penal Code, section 511, making it a crime to forge an instrument or writing being or purporting to be the act of another by which a pecuniary demand or obligation is or purports to be or to have been created, increased, discharged or diminished or in any manner affected, or by which any rights or property whatever are or purport to be or have been created,” or, forges “ an entry in any book of records or accounts kept by a corporation doing business within the state, or in any account kept by such a corporation, whereby any pecuniary obligation, claim or credit is or purports to1 be created, increased, diminished, discharged or in any manner affected.” Of course, in an indictment under such provisions the allegations must show such an instrument or account; that is, one by which a pecuniary demand or obligation is created, etc., and if the indictment fails to show this upon its face it would be defective and demurrable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 N.Y. Crim. 371, 47 Misc. 50, 93 N.Y.S. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-herzog-nycountyct-1905.