State v. Porter

75 Mo. 171
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 75 Mo. 171 (State v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Porter, 75 Mo. 171 (Mo. 1881).

Opinion

Henry, J.

Appellant and one Turner were jointly indicted at a special term of the Randolph circuit court held in June, 1881, and appellant was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of three years, on the following indictment, omitting the caption : “ T. G. Porter and N. R. Turner, late of the county of Randolph aforesaid, on the 25th day of May, 1881, at Moniteau township, in Randolph county, and State aforesaid, within the jurisdiction of said circuit court, with intent to cheat and defraud, did unlawfully and feloniously obtain from William O. Williams a certain valuable thing, to-wit: a promissory note for the sum of $750, and of the value of $750, executed by the said William C. Williams and indorsed in blank across the back by the said William C. Williams, by means and by use of certain false and fraudulent representations and statements and false pretenses, contrary to the form of the statute in such, cases [173]*173made and provided, and against the peace, and dignity of the State.”

The evidence for the State tended to prove that defendant and Turner went to the prosecutor’s house and represented themselves as agents of the Western Medical works of Indianapolis, Indiana, authorized to appoint agents to vend its medicines, and induced the prosecutor to accept an agency, and sign what the latter supposed to-be a contract by which he was to receive a certain amount of medicines to sell on commission, etc., which, he afterward discovered, was a promissory note executed by, payable to, and indorsed by himself, and delivered to the defendant, for the sum of $750 ; that the defendant procured his signature to the note, by pretending to read what he-represented to be a copy of the same, but which was a different paper, imposing no such obligation on the prosecutor.

Section 1335 of the Revised Statutes, is as follows “ Every person, who, with intent to cheat or defraud another, shall designedly, by color of any false token or-writing, or by any other false pretense, obtain the signature of any person to any written instrument, or obtain from any person any money, personal property, right in action, or other valuable thing or effects whatsoever, and every person who sTiall, with the intent to- cheat and defraud, another, agree or contract with such other person, or his. agent, clerk or servant, for the purchase of any goods,, wares, merchandise or other property whatsoever, to be paid for upon delivery, and shall, in pursuance of such intent to cheat and defraud, after obtaining possession of any such property, sell, transfer, secrete or dispose of the same, before paying or satisfying the owner or his agent, clerk or servant therefor, shall, upon conviction thereof, be. punished in the same manner, and to the same extent as for feloniously stealing the money, property or thing so obtained.”

Section 1561, reads as follows :: “ Every person who,. [174]*174with intent to cheat and *defraud, shall obtain or attempt to obtain, from any other person or persons, any money, property or valuable thing whatever, by means or by use of any trick or deception, or false and fraudulent representation or statement or pretense, or by any other means or instrument, or device commonly called the ‘ confidence game,’ or by means or by use of any false or bogus check, or by any other written or printed or engraved instrument or spurious coin or metal, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and upon conviction, etc.,” fixing the punishment, at not less than two years in the penitentiary; and provides that in every indictment under this section, “ it shall be deemed and held a sufficient description of the offense to charge that the accused did on-, unlawfully and feloniously obtain or attempt to obtain (as the ease maybe) from A. B. (here insert the name of the person defrauded) his or her money or property, by means and by use of a cheat or fraud or trick or deception or false and fraudulent representation or statement or false pretense, or confidence game, or false and bogus cheek, or instrument, or coin, or metal, as the case may be, contrary to the form of the statutes,” etc.

Under this section the indictment' was found, and defendant’s counsel insist that he should have been indictéd, if at all, under section 1385. The evidence tended to prove that defendant had, - by a trick, a false pretense, and a fraudulent representation, procured the signature and delivery by the prosecutor to the defendant, of a note, executed by, payable to., and indorsed by the prosecutor for the sum of $750.

l. false PBETENsíiote°fraÓ^n«L e maker‘ We are inclined to the opinion that the facts would have made out a case against him under section 1335, but by a singular oversight, under a misapprehension of the law, the general assembly in that section provided a punishment for this offense, wholly inadequate to its enormity. One-guilty of a violation of that section is punishable only in the same [175]*175manner and to the same extent, as for feloniously stealing the money, property or thing so obtained. The punishment, therefore, would depend upon the amount of money, or the value of the property or thing so obtained, because the value would determine whether the punishment should be that provided for grand larceny or that inflicted for petit larceny.

At common law mere choses in action, as bonds, bills and notes, were not goods whereof larceny could be committed, as being of no intrinsic value, and not importing any property in the possession of the person from whom taken. Russ. on Crimes, 69; People v. Loomis, 4 Denio 382; Wilson v. State, 1 Port. 120. Our statutes have not changed the common law in this respect, except as to notes which have been delivered to the payee by the maker, or indorser thereof. They are, in the hands of the payee, or indorsee, subjects of larceny. It follows, that the only punishment for obtaining a promissory note from its maker, by means of a false token, or other false pretense, is that prescribed for petit larceny, no matter what amount is expressed as payable in the note. At common law, the note in the hands of the maker was not the subject of larceny, and for stealing such an instrument the offender could only be punished for stealing the paper on which it was written. “ There may be larceny of paper, however slight its valúe, since it has some value, and if the paper is written on, still its value is not entirely destroyed.” Bishop Crim. Law, § 768. “ The distinction in England, therefore, is, that if a chose in action is so defective as to be void, or if a promissory note itas been paid, an indictment may be maintained for stealing the price of the paper on which it is written.” Ib. This article may be worth-less than the smallest sum known to the law.” § 767.

Eor obtaining any money, property or valuable thing whatever, by means mentioned in section 1561, the punishment, on conviction, without regard to the value of the thing so obtained, is imprisonment in the penitentiary for [176]*176a term not less than two years. In the ease at bar, by reading what the prisoner represented to be a copy of the-instrument to be signed by the prosecutor, but which, in fact, was not a copy, or, if a copy, was purposely misread by him to the prosecutor, he induced the latter to sign an instrument of a different import from that read by the defendant, and so obtained the signature and the note by a. trick, a deception, a false pretense, and a false representation, and was indictable under section 1561, without regard to the value of the paper, as a promissory note.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Knepper v. People
63 Colo. 396 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1917)
State v. Young
183 S.W. 305 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1916)
Garrett v. St. Louis Transit Co.
118 S.W. 68 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1909)
State v. James
115 S.W. 994 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1909)
State v. McNerney
94 S.W. 740 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
State v. Hathhorn
65 S.W. 756 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1901)
State v. Vandenburg
60 S.W. 79 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1900)
Lewis v. Territory of Arizona
60 P. 694 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1900)
Holton v. State
34 S.E. 358 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1899)
State v. Hudspeth
51 S.W. 483 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1899)
State v. Bartmess
54 P. 167 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1898)
State v. Patty
66 N.W. 727 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1896)
State v. Elmer
22 S.W. 369 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1893)
Birmingham Union Railway Co. v. Smith
90 Ala. 60 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1890)
State v. Brent
100 Mo. 531 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1890)
State v. Trott
36 Mo. App. 29 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1889)
State v. Graves
95 Mo. 510 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1888)
State v. Brooks
92 Mo. 542 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1887)
State v. Saunders
12 P. 441 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1886)
State v. Chamberlain
89 Mo. 129 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Mo. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-porter-mo-1881.