State v. Cunningham

111 S.E. 835, 90 W. Va. 806, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 293
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 835 (State v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Cunningham, 111 S.E. 835, 90 W. Va. 806, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 293 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, President:

The plaintiff in error complains of a judgment imposing upon him imprisonment in the penitentiary of this State, for a period of two years, and founded upon a verdict of •guilt of an offense under sec. 34 of eh. 145 of the Code, known as the worthless check act.

[808]*808As payment for an automobile sold and delivered to him, he contemporaneously drew and delivered to the vendor, J. C. Criss, his check on the Empire National Bank of Clarks-burg, for $1,150.00 and had not sufficient money in that bank, at the time, to pay it, if any at all. A day or two later, the check was presented and payment declined for lack of funds due the drawer, but it was not protested. Immediately or shortly after the unsuccessful effort to obtain payment, the payee found the drawer and, under some sort of an understanding between them, thé automobile was left in a garage from which the vendor soon afterwards obtained possession of it, without having surrendered the check. At that time, the vendee had been arrested on a warrant issued on complaint of the vendor and incarcerated in the jail, or was so arrested and imprisoned very soon afterward, on a warrant previously issued. The former testified the car had been returned and accepted in full adjustment of the controversy; and the latter that it had not been. An offer to prove by several witnesses, an admission of the vendor that it had been taken back in full settlement, was rejected by the court.

Admitted lack of protest of the check was relied upon, as the principal ground of defense, it being contended that, on account of the proviso in the statute, forbidding prosecution, if payment shall be made within twenty days from the date ■on which drawer “receives actual notice, verbal or written, ■of the protest” of the check, there is no punishable offense, in the absence of protest of the check and notice thereof. A motion to direct a verdict for the defendant, based on the lack of protest was overruled. An instruction given at the instance of the State and omitting all reference to protest and notice thereof, and another expressly excusing or eliminating protest as an element in the offense, were given over objections. An instruction requested by the defendant and containing the elements of protest and notice was rejected, and another similar one, refused as offered, was modified so as to limit the notice to total lack of funds or of insufficiency of funds, and given, as modified, over an objection. To all of these rulings against him, as well as to the exclusion of [809]*809evidence offered to prove the car had been taken hack by way of adjustment of the matters in difference between the parties, the defendant excepted.

Determination of the constituent elements of the offense created by the statute involves consideration of the proviso as well as its other parts. The analysis of the statute found in the opinion in State v. Price, 83 W. Va. 71, makes this proposition apparent, and it accords with uniform authority. Bish. St. Crimes, sec. 65, Kent, Com. 463: note. “The general purpose of a proviso is to except the clause covered by it from provisions of the statute or to qualify another portion of the statute. But it is often used as a conjunction to an independent paragraph.” Ga. R. & B. Co. v. Smith, 128 U. S. 174. A proviso introduced by the word, “but,” was so interpreted in State v. Harden, 62 W. Va., 313, 337. The doctrine has been affirmed on numerous occasions. Ches. & O. Ry. Co. v. Peck, 6 W. Va. 397, 403; Stanley v. Colt, 72 U. S. 119; Ches. & Pot. Tel. Co. v. Manning, 186 U. S. 238. The proviso here involved is not a mere exception. It is an additional clause expressing the intent and spirit of the whole section as well as effecting an exception from the operation of the preceding terms. Though it does not specifically say one who has paid a check or draft issued or delivered without funds to pay it and used in the manner and for the purpose mentioned, within twenty days after notice of protest, shall not be guilty of the offense, or that, in such case, no offense shall be deemed to have been committed, under the statute, that is what it means. Moreover, it contemplates no offense in the absence of presentation and protest of the paper and notice of the protest. Read as a whole, it assumes presentation and protest for nonpayment, wherefore it fairly contemplates such procedure, and, under the rules of construction, applicable to penal statutes, these steps must be held to be elements or factors in the operation and administration of the statute. The Legislature did not intend to make every issuance of a check or draft in exchange for money or property, without funds or credit sufficient to pay it, a criminal act. There is no offense, unless the money or property obtained was parted with in reliance upon the false representa[810]*810tion made by the check or draft. The offender must obtain it by issuance or delivery of the check or draft. If the vendor or lender relies upon the financial ability of the other party and not upon the representation of funds in bank, the transaction involves no criminal offense. Inadvertent overdrafts and relations of confidence and trust between men in their' dealings with one another, including reliance upon character rather than specific representations and agreements, were well known to the law makers, and they likely did not intend to open the door to prosecution except in cases of actual fraud of a particular kind. Hence, it may have been deemed advisable to require the payee to present the paper for payment, with reasonable diligence, and have dishonor thereof, in case of nonpayment, formally recorded and notice thereof, given, in order to make it clear that the representation was relied upon and that the drawer so understood it at the time of the exchange. Protest and notice may have been required as a means of making it clear in every case, that payment was actually and properly demanded and refused. In so grave a matter as a charge of crime, growing out of an apparently honest business transaction, it ought to be based upon certain and definite elements. Whether the hypotheses as to legislative intent, just stated, are sound or not, there is a presumption of good reasons for this provision in the act, which must prevail.

The liberal construction here given to the proviso, in restraint of the operation of the terms of the main or penal clause of the statute, is well founded in authority. In its entirety, the statute is construed favorably to the accused, the penal part, strictly, and the exception or restraining clause, liberally. Bish. St. Crimes, secs. 226-229; Sneed v. Com., 6 Dana 338; Dull v. People, 4 Denio. 91; Rex v. Heming, 2 East. P. C. 1116; 1 Hawk. P. C. p. 686, sec. 5; 1 Hale, P. C. 694.; Porter’s Cgse, Cro. Car. 461. The term “divorced ” in a proviso was held to be applicable to one spouse judicially separated from the other by a decree of divorce from bed and board. The author of a threatening letter, known by reason of his handwriting, is not guilty under a [811]*811statute, making it an offense to send a threatening letter “■without any name subscribed thereto, or signed with a fictitious name. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 835, 90 W. Va. 806, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cunningham-wva-1922.