State v. Asal

256 P. 1071, 79 Mont. 385, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 109
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1927
DocketNo. 6,096.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 256 P. 1071 (State v. Asal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Asal, 256 P. 1071, 79 Mont. 385, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 109 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*394 MR. JUSTICE MYERS

delivered the opinion of the court.

With others, defendant was indicted jointly for the alleged offense of making to the state superintendent of banks a false report of the condition of a state bank.

With others, defendant was engaged, at Nashua, in Valley county, in conducting the State Bank of Nashua, a banking corporation, incorporated under the laws of Montana. Defendant was a director and the cashier of the bank. January 3, 1924, the superintendent of banks issued and mailed to defendant a call for a report, to show the condition of the State Bank of Nashua, at the close of business, December 31, 1923, and to be made on a blank form furnished by the superintendent. The call and the form were received by defendant. In response, a report of the condition of the bank, at the close of business on December 31, 1923, was made and sent to the superintendent.

The report was subscribed and sworn to by defendant, as cashier, and was signed, in attestation, by J. E. Arnot and A. M. Sheldon, as directors. The report contained the statement that at the close of business, December 31, 1923, there was due from the First National Bank of Minneapolis, a bank *395 ing corporation at Minneapolis, Minnesota, and an approved reserve agent, to the State Bank of Nashua the sum of $4,196.03 and listed such alleged indebtedness as a part of the resources of the reporting bank. Later, a grand jury found the indictment upon which the prosecution of this case was based. The indictment, in addition to alleging the foundational facts, as well as the issuance of the call and the making of the report and the statement in the report of the alleged indebtedness, in the sum of #4,196.03, of the First National Bank of Minneapolis to the State Bank of Nashua, alleged that such statement was false and that at the close of business, December 31, 1923, there was not due from the First National Bank of Minneapolis to the State Bank of Nashua the sum of $4,196.03 or any other sum, but that, at that time, the account of the State Bank of Nashua with the First National Bank of Minneapolis was overdrawn in the sum of $971.79 and that such false statement in the report of the State Bank of Nashua was made wilfully, wrongfully, unlawfully, knowingly and feloniously, with intent to deceive the superintendent of banks and his duly authorized agents and any and all other persons duly authorized to examine the reporting bank.

The defendant had a separate trial. He was found guilty and judgment was pronounced. He moved for a new trial. The motion was denied. Defendant appealed from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial and he assigns a large number of specifications of error.

The indictment is based upon section 6077, Revised Codes of 1921. That section is divided into and composed of three inhibitions and the second thereof is subdivided into two parts. As so divided, it provides as follows:

(1) “Every officer or other person authorized by this act who wilfully and knowingly makes any false statement of facts, statement of account or report;

“(2) And every officer, agent or clerk of any bank who (1) wilfully and knowingly makes any false entries in the books of such bank or (2) knowingly subscribes or exhibits false *396 papers, with intent to deceive any person authorized to examine such bank;

“(3) And every person authorized by the provisions of this act to make statements or reports, who wilfully and knowingly subscribes or makes any false statement or report, shall be deemed guilty of a felony.”

At the outset, let us say counsel for the state now contend that the prosecution of the case was based upon the third division of that section and that the state did not and does not have to prove defendant guilty of making a false report “with the intent to deceive any person authorized to examine such bank.” We do not agree with that contention.

It is manifest and we hold that the indictment is based upon, and the case was tried below under, the second subdivision of division numbered 2 of the section, viz.: “Every officer, agent or clerk of any bank who * * * knowingly subscribes or exhibits false papers, with the intent to deceive any person authorized to examine such bank * * * shall be deemed guilty of a felony.”

The defendant was an officer of the bank, the cashier, and, in making the report, he acted as such officer. The bank was a state bank. The superintendent of banks and his examiners are authorized to examine state banks. (Sec. 6083, Rev. Codes 1921.) The indictment charges that defendant and others made a false report, “with the intent in the said defendants to deceive the superintendent of banks and his duly authorized agents and any and aE other persons duly authorized to examine said bank.” At the trial, evidence was offered by the state and admitted, over objection, for the avowed purpose of showing in defendant an intent to deceive the superintendent of banks. We find in the brief of counsel for the state argument that certain evidence offered and admitted over the objection of defendant was competent because it was offered for the purpose of showing and tended to show in defendant such an intent. The trial court instructed the jury that specific intent to deceive the superintendent of banks was ,an *397 essential ingredient of the offense charged and that it must be proven beyond reasonable doubt or the defendant should be acquitted. The ease was tried below on the theory that intent to deceive the superintendent of banks was a part of the crime charged and had to be proven; evidently it was tried under the provisions of the second subdivision of division numbered 2 of' section 6077, supra, and counsel may not now be allowed to change the theory of the case. Counsel for the state may not be allowed to take inconsistent attitudes — argue in one portion of their brief that evidence was competent because it showed an intent to deceive and, in another portion, argue that such an intent was not necessary to be proven. We hold, as did the trial court, that the intent to deceive, as charged, is an essential ingredient of the crime charged and, as such, had to be proven beyond reasonable doubt, in order to justify conviction.'

Counsel for defendant contend the indictment is fatally defective and by specification of error challenge its sufficiency. One of the objections urged is that the indictment does not show that the past day specified by the call of the superintendent of banks as the day as of which and at the close of which the condition of the bank was to be reported, viz., December 31, 1923, was a day designated by the comptroller of currency of the United States for reports of national banking associations.

The statutes of Montana provide for regular and special reports of state banks. Section 6074, Revised Codes of 1921, as amended, Chapter 84, Session Laws of 1923, calls for at least three reports, each year, to the superintendent of banks. They are called regular call reports. (Sec. 6071, Rev. Codes, 1921, as amended, Chap. 84, Sess. Laws 1923.) Other reports, designated by statute as special reports, are provided for. (Sec. 6073, Rev.

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Bluebook (online)
256 P. 1071, 79 Mont. 385, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-asal-mont-1927.