State v. Donovan

55 A. 611, 75 Vt. 308, 1903 Vt. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJune 4, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 A. 611 (State v. Donovan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Donovan, 55 A. 611, 75 Vt. 308, 1903 Vt. LEXIS 134 (Vt. 1903).

Opinion

Tyusr, J.

This is a prosecution for forgery. The indictment charges that the respondent had in his possession October 22, 1897, a certain promissory note, for the sum of one hundred dollars, payable to himself or bearer, on demand, with interest, “which note then and there was of the tenor following :

. £No salesman is authorized to make any promise or agreement at variance with terms of the following note and agreement.
J. F. Donovan, dealer in Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Montpelier, Vt.
$100.00
Montpelier, Vt., Oct. 22, 1897.
On demand, I promise to pay J. P. Donovan, or bearer, one hundred dollars at the First National Bank, Montpelier, Vt., with interest, value received for one Packard organ, style chapel, 441, No. 55257, to remain the property of J. P. Donovan, or bearer, until the note is paid in full.
Conditions are to pay $. .1..(..,. ., on the .. ...... day of .. . .1. ... .., and $. .1. .1. .1. . on the.. . .,. .,. . . .1. .day of each month thereafter until the note is paid in full.
Alonzo A. Parsons.
Witness.
No specified time for goods to be delivered.
Union Card Co., Printers, Montpelier, Vt.”
And on the back of said note there was then and there written the following words and figures:
‘N 2-134 Alonso A. Pai'sons, Warren, Vt. 1279-N.
I will deliver to Montpelier, Vt., 20 thousand ft. of 4j4 in. cottage clap-boards, in payment of this note by Dec. 30, 1897.
(Signed) Alonzo A. Parsons.
Accepted the above offer, J. P. Donovan.’ ”

[313]*313The indictment further charges that afterwards, on the same day, the respondent, “ * * * , with force and arms, wittingly,* * * , and feloniously, did alter the said promissory note, and the writing oni the back of said promissory note as aforesaid, by then and there wittingly, * * * , and feloniously making, forging, and changing the figures 4j4 then and there written on the back of said promissory note by the said J. P. Donovan' to the figures five and one-half, and the said figures four and one-half so> being on the back of said promissory note were so changed and -written, and were falsely made, forged and added as aforesaid, did become, import and signify five and one-half, which altered promissory note, and the said writing on the back of said note, which was then and there a material part of said note, is now in the words and figures as altered as aforesaid, are, T will deliver to Montpelier, Vt., 20 thousand ft. of 5 *4 in. cottage clapboards in payment of this note by Dec. 30, 1897, Alonzo A. Parsons.’ Accepted the above order, J. P. Donovan. With the intent,” Etc.

To the indictment the respondent filed a general demurrer and assigned several causes. The demurrer was overruled by the trial Court, and the respondent excepted. The questions raised on the demurrer, on exceptions to the rulings during the trial, and to the charge of the Court, are presented in the respondent’s brief.

It appeared that the respondent sold to Alonzo A. Parsons a Packard organ, and received from him a certain writing. The State claimed that the respondent changed the figure “4” to the figure “q,” after he received the paper, so as to require payment in 514 inch, instead of 4^2 inch, boards; the former being of more value than) the latter. The alleged change of “4” to “5” was the forgery charged.

[314]*314When the paper was offered in evidence, the respondent objected to it on the ground that there were several variances between it and the paper set out in the indictment. The principal variances alleged are:

1. The two lines at the head of the paper contain the words “promises” and “agreements,” whereas, the indictment, before its amendment, used those words in the singular number.
2. The words on the right hand side of the paper: “A contract once completed cannot be amended,” are omitted in the indictment.
3. The indictment omits the word “to” before “Donovan” in the clause, “On demand I promise to pay J. P. Donoe van,” etc.
4. The writing contains upon its face the words “Until ‘this’ note is paid in full.” The indictment uses the word “the” instead of “this.”
5. The respondent claims that the characters and figures on the back of the paper are “N. L,. 134,” whereas the indictment recites them as “N. 2-134.”
6. In the indictment the word “signed,” before the signature of Alonzo A. Parsons, is set forth, while the original paper shows that the word had been crossed off and was not a part of the paper.
7. On the back of the paper, after the “5 1-2” are the letters “inh,” which the indictment sets out as “in.”
8. The indictment charges that the respondent changed the figures “4 1-2” to “five and one-half,” thus describing the change in words instead of figures.
9. In the acceptance on the back of the paper, the word is “offer,” which the indictment recites as “order.”
10. Tire agreement on the back of the paper is* dated [315]*315“Dec. 30, ’97,” which is recited ini the indictment as “Dec. 30, 1897.”

The trial Court held all the variances immaterial, overruled the objections to the paper, and admitted it in evidence, to which the respondent excepted.

The respondent relies upon the rule laid down in 1 Bish. Cr. Pro. § 488: “If the indictment professes to set out -a writing by its tenor, whether in the particular case this exactness of averment is necessary or not, the proof must conform thereto with almost the minutest precision.”

Some of these variances are immaterial under the strict rule above cited; for instance, the lines at the head of the writing contain an instruction to the respondent’s salesmen., and the words “any promise or agreement,” necessarily mean the same as “any promises or agreements.” These lines and the words, “A contract once completed cannot be amended,” are only important as descriptive of and identifying the paper. The omission in the indictment of the word “to” before the respondent’s name, the use of “2” for “D,” and “in” for “inh” on the back of the paper, are immaterial. Under the rule in Bishop, the use of the words “five and one-half” and “four and one-half,” was a material variance, for there was in fact no change of words; the change, if made, being of the figure “4” to the figure “5.” The same is true in the substitution of “order” for “offer,” for there was no “order” of Parsons to accept boards for the one hundred dollars.

But it is unnecessary to discuss these variances seriatim, for, by virtue of V. S. 1912, it was within the discretion of the trial Court to permit the State’s Attorney to amend the indictment and set out the instrument accurately, although this was done after the testimony was closed. It is inconceivable that the respondent could have been prejudiced thereby in his de[316]

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Bluebook (online)
55 A. 611, 75 Vt. 308, 1903 Vt. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-donovan-vt-1903.