State v. . Bailey

6 S.E. 372, 100 N.C. 528
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 6 S.E. 372 (State v. . Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Bailey, 6 S.E. 372, 100 N.C. 528 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

The indictment charges the defendant with the forging, with intent to defraud, a certain written receipt, purporting to be an acknowledgment of the payment of money upon a debt due by him, in form as follows:

"Rec'd of W. T. Bailey eight hundred dollars on land, to be credited on his land note, this 15 May, 1883.

"Mr. Walton accept this. A. D. GAGE."

The defendant was tried upon his plea of not guilty at Fall (529) Term, 1887, of the Superior Court of Iredell, and convicted by the verdict of the jury.

From the judgment of the court sentencing him to imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor for ten years an appeal is taken to this Court. *Page 413

The prosecutor, W. W. Walton, into whose hands had come, as executor of A. D. Gage, the defendant's note, given to the deceased in his lifetime, in the sum of two thousand dollars, the balance due upon a sale of land and to which the writing has reference, testified that the testator died in March, 1885, in possession of the note, which bore date of 1883, and in December of the year of his death the defendant came to witness, asked him to compute the interest thereon, which was done, and the amount, $315, as well as $300 of the principal, was paid by the defendant, who then and repeatedly afterwards promised to pay the balance as soon as he could.

Early in January, 1887, witness was pressing for further payment when he received a letter from the defendant in these terms:

Mr. WALTON.

DEAR FRIEND: — Mr. Henry Burke has failed in getting any money, and so has Mr. Tucker, so far.

Mr. Tucker has been riding 8 or 10 days trying to find a man that has the money, but has not found him yet. I have never seen such a time for money in my life. If they fail, I will not be able to pay you any before spring myself, but I will see you soon.

I will be away from home a few days. I will see you soon.

Yours truly, W. T. BAILEY.

10 January, 1887.

That about the first of the next month witness went out to see defendant, and when about to leave, defendant said he had a secret (530) to tell him, which was that Dr. Gage had given him a receipt for $800 on the note, and produced the writing described in the indictment; that the receipt and signature are neither in the deceased's handwriting, with which he is familiar, having married a granddaughter; and when shown witness the defendant said he had promised to keep it a secret until 1889 because the deceased had gotten the money to pay a colored woman with whom he had cohabited.

The witness said, when first seen, the paper was fresh and unrumpled, and when next seen it was much soiled and rumpled, and in support of his opinion that it was spurious pointed out similarities between it and defendant's handwriting, and the differences between it and that of the deceased.

Numerous experts of high character and accustomed to examine writings in business transactions, and who had long known the deceased, expressed an unhesitating opinion against its genuineness, and comparing it to the will of deceased, admitted to have been written by himself, declare their belief that the writing did not come from the pen of the same person. *Page 414

One Jule Bailey, a witness for the defendant, swore that in the spring of 1883, on May 14th or 15th, while working in the meadow, Dr. Gage came down to the meadow and inquired for defendant, who was not there at the moment but soon arrived, and was greeted by the defendant, who asked, "How are you, doctor?" to which the reply was, "I am here yet." That witness, going off to his work, he heard them counting 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 twice over, and, being called up by the deceased, he saw a piece of money and Dr. Gage said, "Jule, there are eight new bills; did you ever see the like?" They then counted them over again four piles, and Dr. Gage remarked, "Jule, that makes $800; Mr. Bailey is a (531) gentleman, he has met his payment before it was due," and explained why the payment was not to be mentioned as the money was to go to women of his color, etc. That the money, $800, was put in the buggy under the seat, and carried away by the doctor, before which he saw a small scrip of paper, the size of the receipt, and heard the defendant say it was scribbled up, and the answer was, "I've been sick, but Walton will receive it."

One John Fox testified to being present, saw the money, $800, paid, also a blue paper, said by the deceased to be a receipt.

One Edward Young, in May or June, 1883, as he testifies, in a conversation with the deceased, heard him say "that Bailey had paid him $800, and he had receipted him for it."

One J. H. Lackey swore that while building a house for defendant in the fall of 1883 the deceased came every day or two, and he heard a conversation in which deceased said, "That money you paid me, that $800, is nobody's business. You can pay over the balance to Mr. Walton. I don't want anybody to know it until I am dead and gone, it might scandalize me." Making some remark about women.

A. W. Jamieson testified to hearing Dr. Gage say, two or three years before he died, that Bailey had paid nearly all off, and the witness's impression is that he stated that he had gone or was going to Bailey's to get $800.

The defendant's own testimony is full and positive of the payment of $800 in new $20 bills at the time and place spoken of by other witnesses, of the giving of the receipt, of his objection to it, and the answer of deceased that it was all right, detailing all the particulars of the conversation that ensued and why the transaction was not to be mentioned. He further gives an account of the manner and for what the debt was contracted, and corroborates what other witnesses (532) testified to when he was present, and denies, unequivocally, the forgery charged.

The other testimony was mostly as to the good character of the various witnesses examined. It will be seen that the conflict in the evidence *Page 415 is mainly between testimony of experts to the spuriousness of the writing and that of others to the fact of the payment of the money and the delivering of the written acknowledgment of it charged to be a forgery, upon the consideration of which the jury arrived at the conclusion adverse to the accused.

There was no exception to the ruling upon the reception or rejection of evidence, nor were any instructions asked nor those given objected to until after the rendition of the verdict.

The charge was to this effect: The jury are the sole judges of the weight, if any, to be given to the testimony of each witness. They may believe all or none of the testimony of each witness, according to the conviction produced on their minds of the truth or falsity of what each witness has sworn to. The presumption of law is that the defendant is innocent, and the burden is on the State to satisfy the jury of the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. If the jury are satisfied, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant forged the signature of A. D. Gage to the $800 receipt or procured it to be done, with intent to defraud, they will find the defendant guilty; if not thus satisfied, they will find the defendant not guilty. Three days after the rendering of the verdict a new trial was moved upon the following grounds:

1. For that the court did not tell the jury if the defendant paid the $800 to Gage, and he thereupon gave the receipt as and for a genuine one, the defendant would not be guilty, although neither the body nor the signature of the paper were in the handwriting of the deceased.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 S.E. 372, 100 N.C. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bailey-nc-1888.