State v. Thatcher

35 N.J.L. 445
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 N.J.L. 445 (State v. Thatcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Thatcher, 35 N.J.L. 445 (N.J. 1872).

Opinion

Van Syckel, J.

The correctness of the proposition that everything necessary to maintain the indictment must be set forth, and that the facts must be proved substantially as laid, will not be questioned.

It is a general rule that in indictments for misdemeanors created by positive law, the offence may be charged either in the words of the statute, or there may be such a particular statement of facts as will bring the accused within its operation. United States v. Lancaster, 2 McLean 431; People v. Taylor, 3 Denio 91.

The averment here is that the defendant, with the design and intent to cheat and defraud Case of a valuable thing, did falsely pretend, knowing such pretence to be false, that the two notes were paid, and that Case was wholly discharged from liability thereon; and by means of such false pretence, did procure said Case to become surety on two other notes, whereas, in truth, the prior notes were unpaid and outstanding, and said Case was obliged afterwards to pay them.

Conceding that a person who obtains the signature of another as such surety by false pretences, is amenable to the pains of the enactment, what essential element of the statutory offence is omitted in this indictment?

The intent to cheat is specifically charged, and the false pretence by which that guilty intent ripened into a criminal act, is expressly stated.

It is insisted that if the defendant was solvent at the time, and able to pay, no guilty'intention could have existed in his mind, and that the want of an averment that he was insolvent, and that the prosecutor had not collected and could not collect from him the amount which he had paid, is fatal.

It is not of the essence of 'the misdemeanor that the defendant should be unable to restore that which he wrongfully obtains. If, by a false pretence, he had procured the loan of [448]*448$500 in bank notes, his ability to refund the money would not shield him, and it would not be necessary to aver his inability to re-pay.

The crime denounced is the obtaining by false pretences.

By the cheat the prosecutor was moved to part with the thing of value, and was thereby placed in a position of jeopardy which he would not otherwise have occupied. The fraudulent intent was fully manifested in leading the prosecutor to assume a legal liability which subjected him to the contingency of loss.

The defendant’s ability, or his ultimate intention to do what the law would compel him, as the principal debtor, to do, cannot save him.

The charge in the indictment is, that the defendant falsely stated that the two notes had been fully paid and satisfied by him, and that Case was discharged from liability thereon, and the proof to sustain this allegation is, that the defendant said they were all paid off. Could it truthfully be said that they were paid off if they had been taken up by some third person, and were still outstanding as valid obligations ?

If they were paid off they must have been paid off by him, or by some one for him, so that he was fully apprised, by the indictment, of the facts as they wore proved.

In The People v. Herrick, 13 Wend. 90, the variance was held to be immaterial where the indictment charged that the false representation was that the defendant had deposited $300 with one Squier, whereas the proof was that he said he had deposited $150.

It is not necessary that the false pretence should have been the sole cause which moved the prosecutor to lend his name. The influences which operate on the mind in most cases are-numerous and concurrent. In this case, friendship for the-defendant, and a desire to aid him in his business, operated influentially; in the case of a merchant who is induced to-par t with his goods, the hope of gain would be very potential. In- fact it could not often happen that the prosecutor’s mind [449]*449would yield' to the false pretence exclusively, and that no other motive would impel it in the same direction.

It is sufficient, if the jury are satisfied that the unlawful purpose would not have been effected without the influence of the false pretence, added io any other circumstance which might have contributed to control the will of the injured party.

This question was fairly submitted to the jury; and, although the prosecutor did not expressly testify that the false pretence induced him to give his name, his testimony fully warranted the jury in finding that to be the fact. The authorities on this subject will be found collected in a note to section three hundred and seventy-five of the second volume of Bishop’s Criminal Law.

The main question in the ease is, whether our statute is impotent to punish the obtaining by faise pretences a contract of suretyship. The note, in this case, and the paper upon which it was written, belonged to the defendant; the prosecutor merely signed his name as surety, and returned the note to the defendant. Was this signature a valuable thing within the meaning of the fifty-second section of our act respecting crimes ?

This question has been discussed in cases of larceny, where the thing stolen must be of some value to the prosecutor. In Clark’s case, Russel & Ryan’s C. C. 181, the defendant was indicted under 2 George II., ch. 25, for stealing re-issuable notes, the property of Large & Son, while in the course of transmission to them after they had been paid. It was held that the drawers could not have any valuable property in their own notes, and the prisoner was convicted only of the larceny of the paper and stamps on which they were written.

In Phipoe's case, 2 East P. C. 599, some, of the judges held that the prosecutor’s own note could not be said to be of any value to him; others thought it was of value from the moment it was drawn, but that it never was in the possession of the prosecutor, and that it was obtained by duress, and not by larceny.

[450]*450In Walsh’s case, Russel & Ryan C. C. 215, the prisoner was charged with stealing a check drawn by the prosecutor, and the objection that the stolen instrument was of no value to the prosecutor in his own hands, prevailed, and the defendant was acquitted.

In Vyse’s case, 1 Moody C. C. 218, who was convicted for receiving re-issuable notes, knowing them to be stolen, the conviction was sustained. Some of the judges doubted whether the notes were valuable securities, but all agreed that if they were not, they were goods and chattels.

In Aickle’s case, 2 East P. C. 675, the conviction was for the larceny of a bill of exchange drawn by the prosecutor, and accepted by another.

In Rex v. Metcalf, 1 Moody C. C. 433, this point was directly adjudicated. The defendant having been convicted of the larceny of a check drawn by the prosecutor, the judge was induced, by a reference to Walsh’s case, to reserve for the opinion of the judges the question whether the check in the hands of the drawer was of any value to him, and could be the subject of larceny, Lord Denman, C. J., Tindal, G. J., and Justices Gaselee, Bosanquet, Alderson, Williams, and Coleridge affirmed the conviction — Justice Littledale alone doubting. And in Heath’s case, 2 Moody C. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.J.L. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thatcher-nj-1872.