Simmons v. State

167 A. 60, 165 Md. 155, 1933 Md. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1933
Docket[No. 23, April Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 167 A. 60 (Simmons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. State, 167 A. 60, 165 Md. 155, 1933 Md. LEXIS 120 (Md. 1933).

Opinions

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Edgar B. Simmons was indicted on eighteen counts. The indictment charged him with larceny of money from the Citizens’ Bank of TIurlock, Maryland, under the counts with odd numbers, and with obtaining money from the bank by *160 false pretenses •unde'r the counts with the even numbers. Every one of the counts in larceny is followed by a count charging the obtaining of a similar sum of money from the same owner by false pretenses.

The identity of the victim and of the amount and the relative correspondence in time of the crimes charged, and their presentment in separate counts, but in the alternative and sequential forms of'larceny and false pretense, disclose that the offenses alleged in the several counts were associated or cognate crimes.

Before pleading the traverser demanded a bill of particulars. The one furnished was amended (Jules v. State, 85 Md. 305, 36 A. 1027), and the first question raised is the sufficiency of the final particulars furnished by the State. The bill of particulars did not apply to the counts in the indictment which charged larceny, but did furnish the particulars of the offense charged in every one of the counts for the crime of false pretenses. There-was no occasion for a bill of particulars of the larcenies. The day and year, the sum of the current money taken, and its value, and the name of its owner, and the felonious taking from its possession by the traverser, were distinctly and clearly alleged in the approved form in every one of the counts charging a larceny. Code, art. 27, sec. 559; State v. King, 95 Md. 128, 51 A. 1102; State v. Barrett, 148 Md. 155, 128 A. 744; Wedge v. State, 12 Md. 232.

' With respect to the even-numbered counts of the indictment, a different problem arises, because the State had there availed herself of the statutory provision that the indictment need not state the particular false pretenses intended to' be relied on in the proof. When this is done, the right of the traverser to a definite statement of the false pretense of which he is accused is assured by the statutory requirement that, upon his application to the state’s attorney before the trial, the traverser shall be entitled to the names of the witnesses and a statement of the false pretenses intended to be given in evidence. Code, art. 27, sec. 555. The traverser at bar made this demand, and the State complied, but *161 the sufficiency of the bill of particulars is raised. The State furnished the names of the witnesses, whose listing, however, did not restrict the State to their number nor control or affect the competency of witnesses, and, in its discretion, the trial court may allow the State to produce other witnesses than those whose names are so furnished. Cairnes v. Pelton, 103 Md. 44, 63 A. 105; Schaumloeffel v. State, 102 Md. 473, 62 A. 803. So; the- objection to the particulars furnished could not be entertained on the ground that the State had failed to furnish the names of the witnesses for the prosecution; and the reasons assigned were that the particulars were legally insufficient; and that they were a variance from the facts alleged in the false pretenses charged in thq counts of the indictment, and inadmissible if offered in evidence.

There can be no question raised of the form and completeness of the particulars, and, so; the exception is one of substance, and goes to the admissibility of the facts stated tq establish the crime of false pretenses. It, therefore, becomes necessary to consider the crime of “false pretenses,” which, for our present purpose, is defined by statute to bo when any person shall by any false pretense obtain from any other person any chattel, money, or valuable security, with intent to defraud any person of the same; although an intent to defraud any particular person is not necessary provided it be proved that the traverser did the wrongful act with the intent to defraud, but a mere promise for future payment, although not intended to bei performed, is not sufficient to constitute the false pretense. Code, art. 27, secs. 139, 558; Hawthorn v. State, 56 Md. 535; Hochheimer’s Criminal Law (2nd Ed.), sec. 319.

The bill of particulars was addressed to a number of counts, whose similarity and that of the related sections of the bill of particulars' will make a separate consideration unnecessary. It is shown by the bill of particulars that, throughout the entire period of the commission of the crimes charged, the traverser was the president of the bank which *162 was the victim of the false pretenses set forth in the several counts of the indictment; and that he was, also-, the president of the Franklin Credit & Finance Corporation, against whose deposit account in the bank the several sums of money alleged to have been unlawfully obtained by the traverser were ultimately attempted to be charged. .The- false pretenses stated in the bill of particulars were that, on the various occasions when he procured money from the bank, the traverser’s deposit account was overdrawn, and that he so obtained the specified sums of money by, previously, falsely and fraudulently representing to the bank (1) that he had been granted the authority and power to execute and issue a certain charge ticket or paper writing of the Franklin Credit & Finance Corporation for the sum of $2,000, drawn upon the bank and payable by it to the traverser; and (2) that the Franklin Credit & Finance Corporation had previously conferred upon the traverser the power and authority to- have' charged to the corporation’s account of deposit with the bank specific checks, which were drawn on the bank by the traverser at divers times when he had no- sufficient deposit or funds, and payable to various parties for sundry sums, and that the said bank, by reason of such false and fraudulent representations, had so paid these checks for the benefit and upon the request of the traverser and to the persons specified by his order in writing.

The substance of the offense was the obtaining of the money and, with a fraudulent intent, depriving the lawful owner of its title and possession. While in both classes of the false pretenses set out in the bill of particulars, the money did not manually pass from the possession of the bank to the actual possession of the traverser, the money of the bank was so situated that the bank could and did make a complete transfer of the money to the traverser without actual delivery to him; and such transfer was effected by the bank paying out its money on the order of the traverser to his nominees by reason of the prior false and fraudulent pretense or representation by the traverser to the bank that the money *163 of the hank, induced to he paid out for the benefit of the traverser, had been agreed by the Franklin Credit & Finance Corporation should, by the direction of the traverser, be charged against the deposit account with the bank of the Franklin Credit & Finance Corporation.

The bank was made the innocent agent of the traverser to pay to the parties indicated for the traverser’s use and benefit the several sums of money agreed to be paid by the bank, for the traverser.

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Bluebook (online)
167 A. 60, 165 Md. 155, 1933 Md. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-state-md-1933.