People v. Hoyt

145 A.D. 695, 26 N.Y. Crim. 227, 130 N.Y.S. 505, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4820
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 28, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 A.D. 695 (People v. Hoyt) 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. Hoyt, 145 A.D. 695, 26 N.Y. Crim. 227, 130 N.Y.S. 505, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4820 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Houghton, J.:

The defendant was indicted by the grand jury of the county of Chenango for forgery in the first degree and on arraignment interposed a demurrer alleging various grounds of insufficiency of the indictment, the principal ones of which were that it did not state the unlawful act winch the .defendant did constituting the crime of forgery in the first degree, nor set forth whom he intended to defraud.

The indictment contains two counts. The first alleges that the defendant committed the crime of forgery in the first degree in that he “ with intent to defraud, unlawfully and feloni-ously, did" forge a certain deed and indenture of conveyance purporting to be the act of one Sarah J. Birdsall, by which certain rights and interests in real property were purported to be transferred, conveyed, charged and effected, and by which said forged deed and indenture of conveyance the rights and interests in certain real property in said deed described as hereinafter set forth were purported to be transferred and conveyed to one William Pay Hawkins, which said forged instrument and signature is as follows, that is to say:.” (Quoting the deed, signature, acknowledgment, signature of the witness and notary in full.) The second count alleges the commission of the same crime at a different town in the county, in that the defendant with intent to defraud did feloniously utter, dis[697]*697pose of and put off as true a certain forged deed and indenture of conveyance purporting to be the act of one Sarah J. Birdsall by which certain rights and interests in real property purported to be transferred, conveyed, charged and effected, being the same forged instrument and writing set forth in the first count of this indictment, to which reference is hereby made, the said Charles A. Hoyt then and there well knowing the same to be forged.” •

The ground upon which the learned county judge came to the conclusion that these counts did not set forth the acts constituting the crime of forgery with sufficient particularity to constitute a good indictment, was that forgery could be committed in various ways — by false making, or counterfeiting, or alteration, or erasure, or obliteration, or signing of the name of the alleged grantor, or a witness, or*notary, or by piecing together, with intent to defraud, parts of - genuine instruments; and because the crime could be committed in-such different manner it was incumbent upon the People to allege in what way it was claimed the defendant committed the forgery so that he might prepare his defense intelligently and be protected from further prosecution for the same crime.

The entire deed is charged to have been forged and is set forth in full in the indictment, and if the defendant should be acquitted under the present indictment such acquittal would clearly be a .defense to any subsequent specific charge of forging any particular part of the instrument, and, therefore, there can be no question of the defendant being twice put in jeopardy for the same offense.

The crime with which the defendant is sought to be charged is alleged to have been committed in 1905, when section 509 of the Penal Code was in force. That section provided as follows: (e A person is guilty of forgery in the first degree who, with intent to defraud, forges: 1. A will or codicil of real or personal property, or the attestation thereof, or a deed or other instrument, being or purporting’ to be the act of another, by which any right or interest in property is or purports to be transferred, conveyed,- or in any way charged or affected.”

The indictment is in the precise form approved in People v. Alderdice (120 App. Div. 368) and the holding in that case is [698]*698founded upon the decisions of Rosekrans v. People (3 Hun, 288); People v. Dewey (35 id. 311); People v. Hertz (35 Misc. Rep. 177), and People v. Clements (26 N. Y. 193); and is sustained' by the further authorities of People v. Rynders (12 Wend. 425); Holmes v. People (15 Abb. Pr. 154), and Paige v. People (3 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 439).

It is. conceded that the indictment is in proper form if the rule laid down in People v. Alderdice (supra) is a correct one, but it is contended that such rule is not in accord with later, decisions in the Court of Appeals,' and especially with that, of People v. Corbalis (118 N. Y. 516). The indictment under consideration in that case was for poolselling and it was held bad because it-did not state in what manner it was claimed the defendant had committed any of the several acts constituting the crime of’selling, or aiding and abetting the selling of pools.

Ho new rule with respect to the form of indictments was enunciated by that decision. Under the common law it was a cardinal principle of criminal pleading that tiie act or acts constituting the crime should be set forth in the indictment, and section 275 of the Code of Criminal Procedure now commands that it shall be done. All that was decided in the Corbalis case, and all that wasYttempted to be decided, was that under the peculiar reading of the statute against poolselling1 it was necessary to set forth in the indictment what act the defendant did that brought him within the inhibition of the statute. The indictment was held defective in that in • attempting to state the act the pleader- simply repeated the language of the statute prescribing the crime. . .

The verb “forge,” in law, has a clearly defined meaning. Except for certain acts recently grafted upon' the law of forgery, where intent to injure forms no part of the crime, of which People v. Abeel (182 N. Y. 415) is an illustration, it means the making of a false instrument, with intent to defraud. The act constituting the crime in the present case is the forging of the deed set forth in the indictment, the making of the false instrument with intent to defraud. The act constituting the crime is, therefore, clearly charged by simply saying that the defendant forged the deed set forth with intent to defraud, and [699]*699it was unnecessary to state how such forgery was committed, whether by pen or pencil or printing or by false making or counterfeiting any of the various signatures, or altering or erasing or obliterating or piecing together parts of genuine instruments.

That the ‘ Court of Appeals, by its decision in the Oorbalis case, made no new rule with respect to the necessary allegation of indictments, and did not change the long-established rule with respect to charging the crime of forgery, is manifest from the fact that in People v. Dolan (186 N. Y. 4) it held a conviction proper where the charge was simply “forging” and “feloniously uttering” the Instrument which was set fofth. If there had been any such intention in the Corbalis case the court naturally would have referred to its recent previous decisions of People v. Weaver (177 N. Y. 434) and People v. Filkin (176 id. 548, affg. on opinion below, 83 App. Div. 589), where the indictments were in the same form.

All precedents and all authorities sustain the proposition that the .particular manner in which the forgery is committed need not be stated in an indictment, but that' the act constituting the crime is sufficiently pleaded by alleging that the instrument set forth was forged.

Wharton’s Precedents of Indictments and Pleas (3d ed. p. 297) gives as the form

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Bluebook (online)
145 A.D. 695, 26 N.Y. Crim. 227, 130 N.Y.S. 505, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hoyt-nyappdiv-1911.