State v. Henderson

176 N.W. 126, 45 N.D. 19, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 240
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 176 N.W. 126 (State v. Henderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Henderson, 176 N.W. 126, 45 N.D. 19, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 240 (N.D. 1919).

Opinion

'Bronson, J.

The defendant was convicted in the district court for obtaining money under false pretenses. From the judgment entered the defendant has appealed.

In January, 1917, a criminal information was filed charging the defendant with obtaining money and property from certain persons in connection with the promotion and construction of a proposed railway in northwestern North Dakota through false representations and pretenses concerning the qualifications of one Laughery, as a civil engineer and other false pretenses in regard thereto.

At the trial some evidence was introduced to establish the following facts: A large number of farmers residing in or near the counties of Divide and Williams, in northwestern North Dakota, were desirous of having a railroad constructed in such territory. The defendant took up the consideration of the matter with representatives of these farmers looking toward the promotion and construction of such railroad. Many meetings and conferences were held between the farmers, their’ representatives, and the defendant with reference to such promotion and construction. During such negotiations, conferences, including the preliminary contracts made, the defendant represented that he had the financial backing of a loan concern situated in Philadelphia who would finance the bonds for the proposed railroad providing it was feasible; that it was necessary in a preliminary way to have an actual survey made and a financial report of the practicability of such railroad from a financial view point; that it was further necessary that [22]*22the consulting engineer of the eastern concern be secured and his advance fees paid for purposes of determining these matters. It was arranged that $7,000 be raised for such purposes and then the defendant falsely pretended that one W. C. Laughery was the consulting engineer of the eastern concern and that it was necessary to pay him in advance $4,000 before he did any work. The defendant secured W. C. Laughery to work for him. He brought him up with him to the territory involved and introduced him as the consulting engineer from Philadelphia to many of the parties interested and at the various meetings. He made representations that it was necessary to pay such amount of $4,000 to this person before he did any work. The parties interested in the promotion of the project raised the sum of $4,000 in money and placed it in a bank at Orosby, North Dakota.

On March 27, 1916, pursuant to instructions received from the defendant, Laughery went to the bank for this money put up by the farmers. He requested and received therefor a draft of $4,000 upon a St. Paul bank. Laughery was a witness for the state. He testified that he was then a traveling salesman for a varnish company, that he was a carriage painter and automobile painter; that this was about all the work he had done when not on the road traveling, that he never studied civil engineering; that he never did any engineering work of any kind;'that the defendant offered him work; asked him to go with him up to this country to get statistics from elevators, lumberyards, etc., and when he got up there to go to a certain bank and get a draft for the defendant. That his salary was to be $200 per month. The defendant advised Laughery to say that he was a consulting engineer from Philadelphia; that he was advised by the defendant to say, if any questions were asked him about civil engineering, to tell them that he could not say anything about it until the survey was made. He testified that after he received the draft he took it over to the hotel where the defendant was; there he indorsed it and gave it to the defendant. That he never received any of the money represented by the draft. That thereafter he went to different places with one of the farmers’ committee to the elevators, the lumberyards, the implement dealers, and attended some meetings; that at several meetings both before and after the reception of the draft the defendant represented him to be the consulting engineer from Philadelphia. That, after this work was [23]*23done, he asked the defendant on the train when the defendant expected to start work on the railroad; that the defendant replied, “to hell with the railroad, if they never get their road until I build it they will be a long time building it.”

That some report was made covering this preliminary information and survey of the road, which was prepared by the defendant, which was not looked over by him and was merely signed by him at the request of the defendant. The draft was again indorsed by one Budack and subsequently paid.

The general scheme, developed in the evidence for the construction of the railroad proposed, involved a financing by this eastern concern of the bonds to be floated and a financial support to be secured from the farmers interested along the line. A large number of exhibits were introduced, some disclosing the contract made by the defendant and the farmers’ committee as representative of the proposed railroad corporation before and after its incorporation, setting forth the terms of the agreement to be performed by the defendant, Henderson. Later members of the farmers’ committee ascertained that Laughery never was a civil engineer and never had been in the employ of such eastern concern. Thereupon the defendant was taken to task for his false misrepresentations ; trips were made by parties to Philadelphia to visit the eastern concern and a real consulting engineer employed by the eastern concern finally was employed; he visited the section for the purpose of examining the project and made a report concerning the feasibility of the railroad upon which the eastern concern deemed the project not feasible and determined not to lend any financial aid. There is additional testimony in the record to the effect that the farmers’ committee as well as many of the farmers interested were induced to put up and part with their money relying upon these false pretenses and representations made by the defendant. At the conclusion of the State’s evidence, the defendant rested, and, without submitting any testimony, moved the court to advise the jury to return a verdict of not guilty upon many grounds. Upon this appeal the defendant has specified some 66 asserted grounds of error in the proceedings of the trial court. Indeed the court would be led to believe, from the number of objections and motions interposed by the defendant, that the proceedings of the trial court constituted merely a monument of error. The principal [24]*24contention of the defendant, in connection with the specifications of error urged, is that the information does not specifically allege a negation of some of the false pretenses set forth in the information. The defendant separates the false pretenses alleged in the information into four classes generally stated, viz.:

(1) The representation made that Laughery was a civil engineer.

(2) That it was necessary to employ a competent civil engineer to perfect a preliminary survey.

(3) That a preliminary survey and estimate was necessary in order to secure the necessary financial aid.

(4) That it was necessary in order to secure the services of Laughery for such purpose that he be paid in advance $4,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 N.W. 126, 45 N.D. 19, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-henderson-nd-1919.