State v. Socwell

300 S.W. 680, 318 Mo. 742, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 547
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 300 S.W. 680 (State v. Socwell) 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. Socwell, 300 S.W. 680, 318 Mo. 742, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 547 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

In the Circuit Court of Jackson County there was filed an information charging defendant with forgery in the second degree, that is, with having in his possession on December 24, 1924, a certain check with intent to defraud and with selling and delivering same with intent to have it uttered and passed. Tried and convicted, the jury fixed the punishment at two years' imprisonment in the penitentiary, defendant appealing. *Page 746

The salient facts developed by the State warrant the finding that on December 24, 1924, Christmas Eve day, between eight and nine o'clock P.M., a man entered the drug store of Bohling Dumler, 2601 Independence Avenue, Kansas City, while Bohling's wife, Dumler and customers were present in the store, and, accosting Bohling, purchased a bill of goods amounting to seven dollars or more, and tendered a check in payment thereof, drawn on the Franklin National Bank, Philadelphia, purporting to have been issued by the Pennsylvania Railroad System, signed by Henry H. Lee, treasurer, and which check Bohling accepted, delivering the goods and handing the man the excess change. Charles C. Somers was payee of the check, and the man represented himself to be Somers. The check at the time was indorsed and to convince Bohling that he was Somers, he scribbled the name on a pad. The man was in the store about twenty minutes, part of the time being consumed by Bohling's indecision relative to accepting the check. The man told Bohling he lived on Randolph Road in North Kansas City, writing that address underneath the indorsement. Bohling deposited the check in the bank, but it was found fraudulent and returned to him upon the payment of twenty dollars in cash. Bohling positively identified defendant as the man presenting the check. In company with Pinkerton detectives Bohling went to Toledo, Ohio, about January 31, 1925, and, at their suggestion, stationed himself across the street from a certain house, where he observed defendant come from the house, following him to the post office and there identifying him as the man uttering and selling the Somers check. The Pinkerton Detective Agency paid his expenses to Toledo.

I.B. Bekker testified that about two P.M. on Christmas Day, 1925, a man entered his drug store in Kansas City, thereupon purchasing a bill of goods. He tendered in payment a Pennsylvania Railroad check for twenty-five dollars, payable to George C. Edwards, then indorsing it. This check was also signed by Henry H. Lee, treasurer of Pennsylvania Railroad System. The check was banked, but was returned "fraudulent" and charged back to the store. Witness identified defendant as the man who tendered the check in payment of the bill and received the excess change.

Witness Merz testified that he was clerk at the Hotel Victoria in Kansas City, and that on December 24, 1924, defendant there registered as Henry F. Stonington, signing the register. The man offered a check of the Pennsylvania Railroad System, signed by Henry H. Lee, treasurer, for twenty dollars, payable to Henry F. Stonington, which witness refused to cash, but it was later cashed by the manager of the hotel. The register and the check were offered in evidence. He identified defendant as the man who signed the register and who offered the check to him. *Page 747

Henry H. Lee testified that he was treasurer of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and that it was not his signature or handwriting on either of the three checks offered in evidence; that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company is a corporation of Pennsylvania and was such in December, 1924; that the checks are not on forms used by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and that its checks are not marked Pennsylvania Railroad System. He further testified that the Pennsylvania Railroad does business with the Franklin National Bank of Philadelphia and there was such a banking institution as the one mentioned in Philadelphia.

Witness Stevenson testified that he arrested defendant in Toledo and that he waived extradition.

Charles T. Smith of Kansas City, a handwriting expert, stated that the indorsement on the three checks and the signature on the hotel register in his opinion were written by one and the same person.

The salient facts for the defense develop that prior to December 23, 1924, defendant had for about four days resided at the Brown Hotel in Cincinnati, Ohio, with his wife. The wife was employed as a solicitor of funds for a charitable organization in Ohio, the defendant driving her from town to town in her work. About noon on December 23, 1924, they started to drive in defendant's car to Indianapolis, where defendant's mother resides, to spend Christmas with her. The wife, before leaving, sent a telegram over the Western Union to the mother as follows: "Expect to arrive about ten P.M.," which was signed "Bill" by the wife. The records of the Western Union show this telegram. On the way they were required to stop the night of December 23, 1924, at Dunreith, Indiana, on account of sleet and bad weather. They spent the night at the Sherman Hotel in Dunreith, which is about forty miles from Indianapolis. Sherman, the proprietor of the hotel, stated that a man by the name of William H. Socwell and his wife spent the night at his hotel. Unable to reach Indianapolis that night, he attempted to telephone his mother in Indianapolis, but was unable to get connection with her phone. Later on that night, between ten and eleven o'clock he was able to connect with the phone of Gus Grahn, an acquaintance in Indianapolis, but as Grahn was at his drug store Everett M. Carter, on the night of December 23, 1924, answered the phone at Indianapolis, conveying the message to Grahn who relayed it to Mrs. Socwell, the mother. These occurrences are corroborated by the proprietor of the Sherman Hotel, by an official of the local telephone company through whom the telephone call was made, and by Carter, who answered the telephone. Defendant's mother, two sisters, brother-in-law, Grahn and Carter testified that they saw him in Indianapolis on December 24th, and for three weeks following, with the exception of Grahn and Carter, who stated that they saw him only on December *Page 748 24, 1924, in Indianapolis, between twelve noon and one o'clock P.M.

Witness Vining for defendant, vice-president of the Commerce Trust Company of Kansas City, stated that he was a paying teller for twelve years and that in his opinion the indorsement on the three checks, spuriously passed, and the name of Stonington on the hotel register, were written by one and the same person. He further testified that letters and envelopes, which were shown to be in the handwriting of defendant, were not in the same handwriting that appeared on the spurious checks and the hotel register.

Witness Stevenson for the State, being recalled for cross-examination, stated that defendant signed three copies of a waiver of extradition, and that one of the copies was brought to Kansas City and was in the records in the department there. Such other facts as are pertinent will later appear.

I. It is charged that the record does not substantially show guilt, due to its failure to point to the guilt of defendant so clearly as to exclude every reasonableIdentification: hypothesis of innocence. This contention isAlibi. based on the evidence offered by defendant tending to establish an alibi. While the evidence for defendant, if believed, clearly exonerated him, the evidence for the State tended to show that defendant was the man who sold and transferred the spurious check to Bohling. The identification of him by Bohling was positive, as was that of Merz, the hotel clerk.

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 680, 318 Mo. 742, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-socwell-mo-1927.