State v. Griffith

18 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedSeptember 29, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161 (State v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Griffith, 18 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

May, J.

Opinion overruling motion for a new trial.

The defendant in this case was indicted on three counts. - The first count charged the defendant with forging a check drawn on the Second National Bank, to the order of cash, pay roll, signed by the Westlake Construction Company, per George Sexton, General Superintendent. The contention was that the cheek was originally made out for $1,597.30, and that the defendant altered it so that it read for $3,597.30.

The second count charged the defendant with uttering and publishing as true and genuine the cheek set out in the first count of the .indictment, knowing the same to be false, forged and counterfeited at the time it was uttered. .

[162]*162The third count alleged that the Westlake Construction Company was a depositor of the Second National Bank and had on deposit, subject to withdrawal, $3,600, and that the defendant presented the check set out in the first count of the indictment, payable to cash, pay roll, in the sum of $3,597.30, representing it to be a good and valid check of the Westlake Construction Company to the amount of $3,597.30, well knowing in truth and in fact that the check so presented was originally made out in the sum of $1,597.30 and had been altered and changed by him from $1,597.30 to $3,597.30 without the knowledge or consent of the Westlake Construction Company or George Sexton, with the intent to cheat and defraud the Second National Bank out of the same, and that at the time he so falsely pretended as aforesaid he well knew the said pretenses and all of them then and there to be false. In short, the third count was for obtaining money from the Second National Bank by false pretenses.

From the record of the ease it appears that at the October term, 1913, the defendant had been indicted for embezzling from the Westlake Construction Company a sum of money amounting to $5,434.06, and at the January term of the court of common pleas he was arrainged on said indictment for embezzlement and pleaded guilty and was given a suspended sentence.

After the indictment in the present ease was returned a plea in bar was filed to the third count of the indictment on the ground that the money obtained by false pretenses from the Second National Bank was included within the amount charged as having been embezzled by the defendant. Judge Gorman, then sitting in the criminal room, sustained a demurrer of the state to this plea in bar, and this ruling was followed by the trial judge.

At the trial there was a conflict of evidence as to whether or not the check was altered after it was signed by the superintendent, Sexton. Sexton testified that when he signed the check the amount.was $1,597.30. The receiving teller of the Second National Bank, who was acting as paying teller in the absence of the regular paying teller, testified that the check was not altered. The evidence also showed that the defendant, Griffith, [163]*163cashed a check, receiving $3,597.30 from the bank, and left his bank book for balance, he having charge of all the banking business of the Westlake Construction Company, and that immediately after receiving canceled check he left the city and that the canceled check was never returned to the company.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty on the third count of the indictment, that is, finding the defendant guilty of obtaining $2,000 from the Second National Bank by false pretenses.

The defendant has filed a voluminous motion for a new trial, setting out twenty grounds. Upon the argument of this motion all-the grounds were not pressed.

There are three grounds which are_ especially pressed by counsel for the defendant.

The first is that the verdict of the jury is inconsistent in that it found the defendant not guilty on the first and second counts of the indictment, that is, not guilty of forgery and uttering a forged check, but guilty of obtaining money from the bank by false pretenses on a forged check.

From the evidence I can not say that this verdict is inconsistent. The jury were instructed that they could not find the defendant guilty on the third count of the indictment unless they found that the check was forged or altered at the time that it was presented by the defendant to the bank and the defendant knew at the time that he presented the check that it was forged or altered in the amount and that he presented it with the intent to receive the larger amount on the cheek and that the bank acted upon his representations to its detriment.

The court said in its charge -.

“If this check was signed by Sexton and at the time it was signed by Sexton was made out to the amount of $3,597.30, and Sexton made out the cheek for that amount or signed it with that amount in it at the time that he signed it, the defendant can not be. guilty of obtaining money on false pretenses under the third count of the indictment, for the reason that the bank would not have been defrauded of any money. The bank would have honored a check drawn by a depositor under a proper signature and between the bank and the depositor the bank could not be liable and therefore could not have been defrauded of its money. [164]*164But if the check was a forged check at the time it was presented for payment at the bank and Griffith in presenting a forged check to the bank knew' it was forged and fraudulent and represented to the bank in the presenting of it that it was a good check and had been drawn for the full amount, and the bank had paid the check, then the bank would be liable to the depositor for having paid the check which the depositor did not draw, and Griffith would be liable for obtaining from the bank the difference between the amount of the check as originally drawn and the check as altered by him, and then he would be guilty of obtaining money to the value of this difference under false pretenses if at the time you -should find beyond a reasonable doubt that he knew the check was forged or altered at the time he presented it.”

That a person may be guilty of obtaining money by false pretenses by means of a forged cheek is well settled. See Wharton on Criminal Law. Eleventh Edition, Section 1427, and cases cited in Note 1. Of these cases, Reg. v. Prince, L. R., 1 C. C., 150; Com. v. Stone, 4 Met., 43; Com. v. Nason, 9 Gray, 125; Tyler v. State, 2 Humph., 37, bear out the text.

The jury had the right under the evidence and charge of the court to find the defendant guilty as charged on any or all of the counts in the indictment. If the jury saw' fit to find the defendant guilty-under the third count, which carries with it a much less'penalty than that under the other counts, that was its privilege.

Another ground of error which is strongly pressed upon the court is in admitting testimony of the witness Darby in rebuttal, it being claimed by the defendant (1) that there was no evidence to rebut, and (2) that the evidence given was secondary evidence.

■ When the witness Sexton was on the stand for the state, the court permitted the defense, over the objection of the state, to cross-examine the witness to ascertain whether the amount of the forged check was included within the embezzlement charge. This was done for the purpose of testing the credibility of the witness, who had testified that the check was in the sum of $1,597.30 at the time that he signed it.

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Related

Craig v. State
5 Ohio St. 605 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1854)
Woodcock v. Bowman
61 Ky. 40 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1862)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-griffith-ohctcomplhamilt-1914.