People v. Ranney

116 N.W. 999, 153 Mich. 293, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 1025
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1908
DocketDocket No. 127
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 116 N.W. 999 (People v. Ranney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Ranney, 116 N.W. 999, 153 Mich. 293, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 1025 (Mich. 1908).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

Respondent is charged, in the information, with obtaining' money by false pretenses. The pretenses alleged are that he was owner of a certain check and order for the payment of money, that the check was of the value of $50, and that there was on deposit at the place of payment designated in the check $50 with which to pay it when presented, and that said sum would be paid to the complainant, or bearer, upon presentation of the check, and that there was at the place of payment a book, No. 583, and would be when the check was presented, and that said book showed a balance on deposit of $478. A copy of the check is set out, as follows:

[295]*295“ New York, April 4, 1907. $50.00
“ Pay on Book No. 583.
“Union Dime Savings Institution.
“Broadway, 32nd St. & 6th Ave.
“Fifty dollars, to myself or bearer, and this shall be your receipt.
Signature, “L. J. Cameron.
“ Individually, or as trustee, as the book reads,
“ Present Address, Grand Rapids, Mich.
“Previous Balance $478.00.
“ Endorsed on Back, M. C. Ranney, J. E. Rice.”

The record discloses that respondent procured the check to be cashed at a hotel where he was stopping, paid his bill out of the proceeds and retained the balance. The hotel keeper indorsed the check and negotiated it with a merchant, who deposited it in a local bank for collection. It was sent by the local bank to New York city and returned unpaid. There is no other testimony tending to prove that the check was ever presented at the designated place of payment. Beyond the fact that the check was so forwarded and so returned unpaid, there is nothing tending to prove the check was worthless except an alleged confession of respondent, testified to by officers who had him in charge.

It is contended, and it is the principal question presented, that there was no sufficient proof of the commission of the offense. The proposition advanced is that the commission of a felony cannot be proved by the extrajudicial confession of the accused. Applied to this case, this means that guilt of the respondent may not be determined by his confession that the check was, and was by him known to be, worthless; that the people were bound to show presentation of the check to the Union Dime Savings Institution, in New York, if such an institution existed; that it was not drawn against funds, that payment was refused.

It is the general rule that the corpus delicti may not be proved by the naked extrajudicial confession of the accused. 12 Cyc. p. 483; 6 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d [296]*296Ed.), p. 582; Wharton on Criminal Evidence (9th Ed.), §§ 632, 633; People v. Lane, 49 Mich. 340. The question presented leads to the inquiry, What is the corpus, delicti in a case like this one ? In 3 Wigmore on Evidence, § 2072, it is said that an analysis of every crime, with reference to this element of it, reveals three component parts, first, the occurrence of the specific kind of injury or loss (as, in homicide, a person deceased; in arson,, a house burnt; in larceny, property missing); secondly, somebody’s criminality as the source of the loss, — these two together involving the commission of a crime by somebody; and, thirdly, the accused’s identity as the doer of this crime; that the term corpus delicti seems in its orthodox and its logical sense to signify merely the first of these elements, namely, the fact of the specific loss or injury sustained, although some judges (Chief Justice Shaw in Com. v. Webster, 5 Cush. [Mass.] 295, and Chief Justice Church in People v. Bennett, 49 N. Y. 137, among others) have held that it also includes the second element. I do not find any general rule laid down by the' decisions of this court. Language is employed in People v. Hall, 48 Mich. 482, 485, which indicates that in cases, of homicide the corpus delicti involves the death and, also, its character — whether probably caused by someone other than the deceased. See, also, People v. Aikin, 66 Mich. 460, 472-474; People v. Parmelee, 112 Mich. 291, 294, 295. The rule that the corpus delicti must be proved by some evidence other than the confession of the accused,— that the confession must be corroborated, — is recognized, in People v. Lambert, 5 Mich. 349, 366; People v. Isham, 109 Mich. 72; People v. Hawksley, 82 Mich. 71, 73, 74;. People v. Kemp, 76 Mich. 410, 416; People v. Hess, 85 Mich. 128, 132, but without determining, in either case, except perhaps inferentially, what constituted the corpus delicti. In some cases, the idea has been expressed that the nature of the offense charged was such that no proof' of the corpus delicti could be made as of a separate element of the offense. Such are the cases of People v. [297]*297Swetland, 77 Mich. 53, 63; People v. McGarry, 136 Mich. 316, 324. In People v. Swetland, it was said:

“ There are some cases where the corpus delicti — generally in homicide — is clearly separated and distinct from the question as to who committed the offense, if any is found to have been committed. In such cases the evidence to establish the corpus deliciti must first be given, before acts or admissions of the accused can be put in evidence. But the present case is one where the body of the offense — the uttering of a forged instrument, knowing it to be false — is so intimately connected with the question whether or not the respondent is guilty of the crime, that there can be no such separation. The corpus delicti in this case depends entirely for its existence upon the acts and intent of the respondent, so that her acts and admissions, if admissible at all, were admissible at any stage of the proceedings upon the trial.”

For the purposes of the present case, it may be conceded that it was necessary that the confession of respondent should be corroborated as to the corpus delicti. Whether we consider only the first or the first and.second elements, as stated, as constituting the corpus delicti, there is, in this case, evidence corroborating the facts stated by respondent in his confession. I use the term corroborate as meaning not merely tending to produce confidence in the truth of the confession, but as referring to facts which concern the corpus delicti. This is the legally correct meaning. 3 Wigmore on Evidence, § 2071. There is evidence undisputed — indeed corroborated by respondent — that he applied to Mr. Rice, the keeper of the hotel, to cash the check, that the check was cashed and respondent received the money. The check was forwarded in the usual course of business to New York and was returned unpaid. It has not been paid and Mr. Rice has never received his money. Before the check was cashed, and as an inducement, respondent, who was at the hotel with a woman not his wife, and owed the proprietor for entertainment, stated that they were going to Muskegon for three or four days and would then return to the hotel, and that mean[298]*298time Mr. Rice could find out whether or not the check was good; that he would leave a big trunk and a typewriter in it. He left the trunk but no typewriter.

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Bluebook (online)
116 N.W. 999, 153 Mich. 293, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ranney-mich-1908.