State v. Hill

30 Wis. 416
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 30 Wis. 416 (State v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin 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. Hill, 30 Wis. 416 (Wis. 1872).

Opinion

Lyon, J.

This case comes hereupon exceptions duly taken and allowed at the trial, pursuant to the statute. Tayl. Stats., 1945, (ch. 180, R. S.) §§ 7, 9 and 10. The circuit judge has also made a report, pursuant to sec. 8 of the same chapter, submitting, for the decision of this court, a single question of law.

Were the case here upon the report alone, it is very doubtful whether this court would have any authority to decide any question therein, except the one which the circuit judge has reported to be, in his opinion, “ so important or so doubtful as to require the decision of the supreme court.” State v. Anson, 20 Wis., 651. But inasmuch as the case is here upon exceptions also, our power as well as our duty to pass upon all of the exceptions which appear by the record, or upon such of them as are material to a proper disposition of the case, is indisputable.

The defendant was tried in the circuit court upon an information charging him, in three counts thereof, with having forged a certain promissory note therein described; and in two counts, with having uttered as true the said forged note, knowing it to be forged. There is no averment in either count of the information, that the forged note was stamped with a United States revenue stamp.

The verdict finds the defendant guilty on the two counts charging him with having uttered the forged note, but is silent as to the counts charging the forgery.

I. The first question to be considered is, whether the omission from the information of an averment that the forged note was duly stamped, is fatal to the information. This is [419]*419tbe question submitted to us for decision in tbe report of tbe circuit judge, and it is also presented by due exceptions taken by .tbe defendant on tbe trial.

No lengthy discussion of tbis question is necessary. In John v. The State, 23 Wis., 504, it was beld that an indictment was bad wbicb charged tbe forging of a draft, and purported to set out tbe draft in full, but did not contain an averment that tbe same was stamped. Tbis decision is founded on tbe assumption that an unstamped draft is void under tbe act of congress. But we bave bad occasion to review that decision in three cases wbicb bave since been before us, and, following and adopting tbe doctrine of many adjudged cases in tbe state and federal courts, we bave reached tbe conclusion that an unstamped draft, note or other instrument wbicb tbe act of congress requires to be stamped, is not void for want of a stamp, but is a valid instrument, unless it shall be made to appear by evidence that tbe stamp was fraudulently omitted; and that, therefore, the case of John v. The State was erroneously decided. Rheinstrom v. Cone, 26 Wis., 163; Grant v. The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, 29 id.; Timp v. Dockham, 29 id., and tbe authorities cited in these several cases. In tbe present case tbe alleged forged note was introduced on tbe trial, and was duly stamped.

We conclude, therefore, that the information is not bad by reason of the omission of an averment that the note was stamped, and so advise the circuit court.

II. We are of the opinion that the several counts of the information sufficiently describe the note, and that there is no material variance between the information and the proofs in this respect. As the law now is, it is sufficient to set forth the purport of the instrument, and this appears to bave been done in this information. Tayl. Stats. 1932 § 29. (General Laws of 1871, Ch. 137, Sec. 14.) It is deemed unnecessary to set out the information in full.

III. The testimony shows that the prosecuting witness, whose [420]*420name is signed to the alleged forged note, and the defendant, who is named as payee therein, had an interview at the house of the defendant’s father, in September, 1810 — probably on the 13th day of that month — in the evening. The testimony on the part of the defendant tends to show that the former executed the note, which purports to be for $235, on that occasion, and that the consideration therefor was, that the defendant should aid him in procuring payment of a disputed claim which he had against the Madison Mutual Insurance Company for a loss by fire. The testimony for the state tended to show that the prosecuting witness did not execute such note, but that at the interview just mentioned, he gave the defendant an agreement in writing to pay him $35, when the insurance company should pay his claim. Much testimony was given on both sides, and properly so, concerning what transpired at that interview.

But the state was permitted, against the objection of the defendant, to give testimony of several previous conversations between the same parties, concerning the collection of such claim from the insurance company. Such testimony tends to show that the prosecuting witness at first declined to give, or at least, was reluctant to give, the defendant fifty dollars for such services and his expenses; that he at first refused to give any writing therefor; and that the defendant estimated his expenses and the value of his time while engaged in rendering such services at fifty dollars or less. Thus far the testimony of those conversations was admissible, because those facts have a direct bearing upon the main question in the case, as to whether the prosecuting witness executed the note alleged to be a forged note. The testimony, however, did not stop here, but includes long conversations, which were not competent to be proved on the trial of the issue in the case, and which might have prejudiced, and which probably did prejudice the defendant in the estimation of the jury. . Eor example, such testimony tended to prove that the defendant had influence with the officers of the [421]*421insurance company, and proposed to use that influence to induce the company to pay the claim of the prosecuting witness, concealing from the company the fact that be was in the employ of the claimant, while at the same time he strongly intimates his opinion that the claim is not a just one. It is clear that such testimony as this, and there is much more of it, does not tend to prove the charge in the information; and it is also clear that it might have injured the defendant 'in the estimation of the jury. It should have been rejected. After the state had given such portions of those previous conversations as were competent testimony, then, by a familiar rule of evidence, the defendant had the right to the whole conversations, whether material to the issue or not; but it was a material and fatal error to give the state that right in the first instance.

It is claimed by the attorney general that the defendant, by giving some testimony relating to those conversations, opened the door for the admission of the whole thereof on behalf of the state. We have examined the bill of exceptions with care, and we find no testimony called out by the defendant, or given in his behalf, which should be held to operate, as claimed, to admit this incompetent and damaging testimony on behalf of the state.

IY. It has already been stated that the jury did not find expressly whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty of the charge of forgery contained in three counts of the information, but that their verdict was silent in respect thereto.

The question arises, is this a partial verdict upon which no lawful judgment can be rendered ? Or is the verdict equivalent to an express acquittal of the defendant .on the counts charging him with the crime of forgery ?

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Bluebook (online)
30 Wis. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hill-wis-1872.