State v. Duffield

38 S.E. 577, 49 W. Va. 274, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 30
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 577 (State v. Duffield) 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. Duffield, 38 S.E. 577, 49 W. Va. 274, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 30 (W. Va. 1901).

Opinion

McWhorter, Judge:

J. F. C. Duffield was indicted in the circuit court of Roane County for forging the names of A. J. Arnold and C. L. Moore by endorsement thereof on the back of a note of which the following is a copy: “Twenty dollars and fifty-five cents. Spen[275]*275cer, W. Va., Nov. 13, 1896. Ninety days after date I promise to pay to the order of A. J. Arnold twenty and fifty-five one hundredths dollars, value received. Negotiable and payable at the Bank of Spencer, Spencer, W. Va. J. F. C. Duffield,” and uttering and attempting to employ as true the said note, and said forged and fraudulent endorsement. On the 31st of August, 1900, the defendant. having entered his plea of not guilty, a jury was impaneled, and the jury having heard the evidence and arguments of counsel returned a verdict of guilty. Defendant by his counsel moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant him a new trial, because the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence, and because of certain rulings of the court during the progress of the trial before the jury, which motion was overruled, to which ruling of the court the defendant excepted and took three several bills of exceptions, which were saved to him in the record. The first assignment of error, that it does not appear from the record that there was a finding of the indictment by the grand jury, has been corrected, the record having been supplied on writ of certiorari. The second assignment is that the verdict is signed by W. H. Hurst, as foreman of the jury, when the record discloses that no such person was impaneled as one of the jury. It is true that the printed record shows that W. H. Hurst signed the verdict, and that no person by the name of Hurst was impaneled on the jury, but an inspection of the manuscript record shows the ' name of W. H. Hunt as signing the verdict, and the name Hurst in the printed record was merely a typographical error. The name of Henry Hunt appears among the jurors impaneled. There was but one Hunt on the jury, and it is not at all probable that after the jury was sworn that Henry Hunt got out of the jury box and W. H. Hunt, another and a different person took his place in the presence of the court and its officers. The verdict was rendered on the same day the jury was impaneled, and if the jury left the court room before retiring to consider of the verdict, they were in the custody of the sheriff and his deputies, who were sworn to keep them together and to permit them to have no communication with any one concerning the matter before them. The juror Hunt evidently was called Henry, the name by which he was commonly known, and when he wrote his name to the verdict, he did so by using his initials only. There is scarcely a more common Christian name than [276]*276that of William Henry, and it is almost certain that this was the full name of Henry Hunt, the juror in this case. Younger v. State, 3 W. Va. 579, is invoked to support this assignment of error, in which case the name of P. B. Shrively was signed to the verdict, when no man by the name of Shrively was impaneled on the jury, and no name anything like it. One P. B. Smith being the same initials only, was the nearest approach to it. State v. Morgan, 35 W. Va. 360. The third assignment of error is based upon the fact that the court obliterated a part of the 'endorsement contained on the note upon which the charge of forgery in this case is predicated, and then allowed the note so obliterated to be oifered in evidence,' as shown in bill of exceptions No. 3. The endorsement so obliterated was no part of the note or. endorsement for the purpose of using it, but was simply an affidavit written on the back of said note, made and signed by A. J. Arnold, one of the alleged endorsers of said note, to the effect that the signature on the back of said note was a forgery, that he did not sign his name, neither did he authorize his name to be used in said note. Defendant’s counsel cites State v. Johnson, 36 Iowa, 407, 96 Am. Dec., 158, in support of his assignment, where it is held that, “No technical words, such as Tenor,’ etc., need to be used to express that copy of instrument is set out in the indictment. For this purpose the words ‘of the purport and effect following’ are sufficient, at least, when the indictment then does, in fact, set out a copy of the instrument.” It was wholly unnecessary, in case at bar, to set out the affidavit endorsed on the back of the note, as it was no part of the instrument. Burress Case, 27 Grat. 934 (944); Perkins’ Case, 7 Grat. 651. The endorsements used.for the purpose of negotiating the note and procuring the proceeds thereof from the bank were not obliterated. The note with the endorsement as used in its negotiation was proper to go in evidence if it corresponded to that set out in the indictment and the defendant was not prejudiced thereby. The fourth assignment, because said indictment undertakes and does not set out in haec verla or literally, the note charged to have been forged, and the name appended to the note described in the said indictment is that of ‘J. F. C. Duffield,’ while the name of the party appended to the note read in evidence to the jury is that of ‘J. F. C. Dufield,’ thus showing a clear variance between the allegation of the indictment and the proof offered to [277]*277support it.” The indictment contains four counts, and the note, with its fraudulent endorsements alleged to have been forged and uttered set out in baec verba in each count and in each count described as being signed “J. F. C. Duffield.” On the trial the State offers in evidence a note identical with that described in the indictment, except that it is signed by “J. F. C. Dufield.” In Crawford v. State, 40 Tex. Crim. Rep. 344, it is held that, “Where an indictment -charges Jasper Crawford with passing a forged instrument, and the instrument itself shows that it purports to have been drawn in favor of Jasper Crawford, this would constitute a variance as to the name.” Also State v. Fay, 65 Mo. 490, it is held that although their statute dispenses with the common law rule which requires that an indictment for forgery should set out the instrument alleged to be forged in haec verba; “but it is still necessary that it should be described accurately; and very slight inaccuracies will be fatal. An indictment described the instrument alleged to be forged as a note for sixty dollars, signed with the name of James C. Orr. The instrument offered in evidence was a note for sixty dollars bearing interest at ten per cent, from date and signed by J. C. Orr. Held, a fatal variance, both as to the name of the supposed maker and the liability which the instrument purported to have created,” and in Agee v. State 113 Ala. 52, the indictment set out the forged instrument, an order in favor of “King Jackson” for goods, directing the bill therefor to be charged to a designated person “on merchandise,” an instrument offered in evidence which is an order for goods in favor of “Kinge Jackison,” and directs the bill to be charged to the same designated person “on mchin-dise” is held not to be the paper laid in the indictment, and is inadmissible in evidence, “the variance between the two papers being fatal.” And in State v. McEwen, 151 Ind. 485, it was held, “In a prosecution for larceny proof that one of the owners of the stolen property was Franklin A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 577, 49 W. Va. 274, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-duffield-wva-1901.