State v. Childers

49 P. 801, 32 Or. 119, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 108
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 49 P. 801 (State v. Childers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Childers, 49 P. 801, 32 Or. 119, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 108 (Or. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chiee Justice Moore.

The defendant, Ben. Childers, was indicted and tried for and convicted of, the crime of knowingly uttering and publishing as true and genuine a forged indorsement of a county warrant of Multnomah County, with intent to injure and defraud one M. M. Bloch; and, having been sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of six years, he appeals from the judgment thus rendered, assigning numerous errors, which will be considered. The indictment having set out a warrant of the tenor following: “ No. 8117. Portland, Oregon, July 2, 1894. 'Treasurer of Multnomah County, Oregon: Pay to A. Hallock, or order, thirty-one 56-100 dollars and -- cents, out of the road funds in your hands, not otherwise appropriated. Class 32 for road work. Desk No. 9. By order of the county court. T. C-Powell, clerk of Multnomah County, by H. C. Smith, deputy,” — there was introduced in evidence, over the defendant’s objection and exception, a county warrant of said county, issued for “ road work, Dist-No. 9”; and it is contended that there was such a variance between the allegations of the indictment and the recital of the warrant as to render the latter inadmissible in evidence. The rules of the common law required the prosecuting officer to set out, if possible, in an indictment for forgery, the alleged fraudulent writing in hsec verba, to enable the court, from an inspection of the pleading, to judge whether [122]*122the instrument claimed to have been unlawfully-uttered was one of which forgery might be committed: 2 Bishop’s New Criminal Procedure, § 403; State v. Callendine, 8 Iowa, 288; Santolini v. State (Wyo.), 42 Pac. 746. The form prescribed for an indictment for forgery does not provide that the instrument which is the subject thereof shall be set out in hæc verba (Hill’s Ann. Laws, p. 1004); and in an action on an indictment alleging the substance and legal effect only of a writing claimed to have been forged, it was held that a variance of two days in the dates stated in the pleading and as recited in the instrument was immaterial: State v. Thompson, 28 Or. 296 (42 Pac. 1002). It would seem that, under our statute, the common-law rule has been abrogated; that it is now unnecessary to set out in the indictment the tenor of a written instrument alleged to have been forged, and that the substance or legal effect thereof is sufficient to enable the court to judge whether the writing is the subject of forgery, and to permit the defendant to make his defense.

The state having elected to set out in the indictment the tenor of the instrument, the question is presented whether it is bound to prove the fact as alleged, thus rendering the order inadmissible in evidence. It is an elementary rule that, when a thing necessary to be mentioned in an indictment is described with unnecessary particularity, all the circumstances of the description must be proved; for they are all made essential to the identity, and hence a variance in the proof is usually fatal: [123]*1231 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 65. “It may be observed,” says this learned author at section 58,. “ that any allegation which narrows and limits that which’ is essential is necessarily descriptive. Thus> in contracts, libels in writing, and written instruments in general, every part operates by way of description of the whole. In these cases, therefore, allegations of names, sums, magnitude, dates, durations, terms, and the like, being essential to the identity of the writing set forth, must, in general,, be precisely proved.” Under the very strict rules announced by Professor Greenleaf, the variance complained of may have been fatal, but we think the-better doctrine is expressed by Earl, J., in Harris v. People, 64 N. Y. 148, in which he says: “The-strictness of the ancient rule as to the variance be. tween the proof and the indictment has been much relaxed in modern times. Variances are regarded as material, because they may mislead a prisoner in making his defense, and because they may expose-him to the danger of being again put in jeopardy for the same offense.” Applying this modern rule to the case at bar, we think the defendant could not have been misled in making his defense by this variance; and, further, the identity of the county warrant described in the indictment with the one offered in evidence is unquestionable; and such being the case, the judgment rendered will afford a bar to another prosecution for the same .offense. From an inspection of the indictment, the court could say, as a matter of law, that the writing imported an obligation to pay a given sum of [124]*124money, and was therefore a subject of forgery; and, the amount therein specified not being involved in the recital that it was executed for road work either in Desk or Disk No. 9, we deem the variance immaterial.

It is also contended that the court erred in permitting the state to offer in evidence, over the defendant’s objection and exception, what purported to be an order issued by A. Hallock, requesting the clerk of said county to deliver to the defendant the county warrant in question. The rule is well settled that where a party is chargéd with knowingly uttering a forged instrument, and the fact of his possession of the paper is shown, but his knowledge of its character is disputed, it is admissible to show that, shortly before or after the event charged, he held or uttered similar forged instruments, to an extent which makes it impossible that he should be ignorant of the forgery: Wharton on Criminal Evidence, § 39; 3 Rice on Evidence, § 494. Mr. Wharton, in his work on Criminal Law (section •649), referring to this question, says: “ Where the scienter or quo animo is requisite to, and constitutes a necessary and essential part of, the crime with which the person is charged, and proof of such guilty knowledge or malicious intention is indispensable to establish his guilt in regard to the transaction in question, testimony of such acts, conduct, •or declarations of the accused as tend to establish such knowledge or intent is competent, notwithstanding they may constitute in law a distinct crime.” To the same effect, see, also, 1 Greenleaf [125]*125on Evidence, § 53, and 3 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 15, and notes. There is no evidence in the record, however, that tends to show that defendant disputed his knowledge of the character of the instrument, or claimed the right, as the agent of Hallock or otherwise, to indorse the county warrant for him; but inasmuch as the bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all the evidence introduced at the trial, in the absence of which it must be presumed that such evidence was before the court, it thereby renders admissible the forged order of Hal-lock, upon the faith of which, the defendant obtained the warrant in question from the county clerk.

The defendant, at the first trial on this indictment, was a witness in his own behalf, and, his testimony being taken in shorthand, the stenographer reporting it was permitted, over the defendant’s objection and exception, to read the notes thereof to the jury; and it is now contended that, the defendant not having offered himself as a witness at this second trial, the record of his testimony given at the former trial could not be given in evidence against him, and that the court erred in permitting it to be read to the jury. The testimony in question was highly prejudicial to the defendant, being tantamount to a confession of his guilt; and as declarations against interest, when voluntarily made, are admissible, as tending to prove guilt

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P. 801, 32 Or. 119, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-childers-or-1897.