State v. Zimmerman

60 S.E. 680, 79 S.C. 289, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 7, 1908
Docket6795
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 S.E. 680 (State v. Zimmerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Zimmerman, 60 S.E. 680, 79 S.C. 289, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 57 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Ernest Moore, Acting Associate Justice

in place of Mr. Justice Woods, disqualified. At the March term, *291 1907, of the Court of General Sessions for the County of Richland, the appellant Daniel Zimmerman and one Thomas J. Gibson were called to plead to an indictment containing substantially the following three counts :

(1) Charging conspiracy between the said Daniel Zimmerman, a bookkeeper in the office of the State Treasurer of the State of South Carolina, and one Thomas Gibson, “to forge and to make a false entry in a Bond' Registry Book, a public record in the State Treasurer’s office of the State of South Carolina, and to plaae on the market and sell” certain surrendered and redeemed bonds oif the said State, “and appropriate the proceeds to their own use, with intent to cheat and defraud- the State of South Carolina,” etc., and that they afterwards “accomplished their unlawful and wicked purpose,” etc.

(2) Charging forgeryby the said D'aniel Zimtmerman, in that he did “forge and make a false entry in a Bond Registry Book, which said Bond Registry Boiok was then and there a public record of the State Treasurer’s office of the State of South Carolina, and was then and there kept by the said Danieil Zimtmierman as bookkeeper in said Treasurer’s, office,” ‘by entering in 'the said B'ond Registry Book the bond No. 744 Brown Consols, in lieu and in place of Brown Consol Bonds, one of either of the Nos. 959 or 1445, redeemed by the State of South Carolina on the said 21st day of May,” 1901, “and should hawe been cancelled on that day by the said Dlaniel Zimmerman, whose duty it was to cancel them then and there; but the said Daniel Zimmerman- did not cancel either of the said bond's, numbered 959 and 1445, and did not enter them on said Bond Registry Book after they were redeemed then and there -by the State of South Caro lina, but entered 'the old surrendered, redeemed and can-celled bond, No. 744, on the Bond Registry Book as a bond surrendered and- redeemled on that day, which- said bond, No. 744, -bad been redeemed by the State of Stouth Carolina some years prior thereto, and at that time cancelled, and the *292 said Daniel Zimmerman then and there placed on the market and soldi both of the said 'bonds, Nos. 959 and 1445, with intent to 'defraud the State oif South Carolina,” etc.; and, also, 'Charging the said defendant Gibson with aiding and abetting in the commission of the felony aforesaid.

(3) Gharging the uttering and publishing by the said Daniel Zimmerman, in that he did “utter and publish as true a certain false, forged and counterfeited writing, to wit: the false and forged entry in a Bond Registry Book,” etc., being the same entry charged as forgery in 'the said second count, and “placed on the market and sold ‘both of said bonds, Nos. 959 and 1445, with intent to defraud the State of South Carolina,” etc.; and ateo charging aiding and abetting as to the defendant Gibson.

Upon arraignment the 'defendant Zimmerman moved to quash the second and third counts of this indictment upon the ground' that no indictable offense was 'charged, inasmuch as at comimon law: there is no such- offense as that charged in said count's and under the statute it must be charged to have been committed with intent to cheat and defraud a person and the State of South Carolina is not a person as mjeant by 'the statute. This motion being overruled, the defendant Daniel Zim|merman 'entered a plea of “guilty as charged” in the indictment, and having been duly sentenced, he now) appeals from, the order refusing toi quash the second and third! counts of the indictment.

Appellant’s exceptions .allege error in the holding that the second and third counts of 'the indictment charge 'an indictable offense, the ground's of alleged error being:

1. “Because at common law diere is no such offense as that charged in the said two counts.

S. “Because, under the statute, the offense must be alleged to ibe to cheat and defraud 'any person’ and ‘the State’ is not such ‘person’ as is therein contemplated.”

*293 1 *292 It is to be noted that no question is made -by 'these exceptions as to the sufficiency of the first count oif the indictment, and no error is thereby alleged in the judgment and sentence *293 upon that count. In argument, however, the appellent submits that the first count oif the indictment charges a misdemeanor 'and. the other county attempt to charge felonies, and that a 'general plea of guilty and the sentence thereupon must be referred to the graver offense only; appellant citing in support of this proposition the case of the State v. Nelson, 14 Rich., 169.

While it may foe true that, where all the counts in an indictment are good, a general plea of guilty and the sentence thereupon will be referred to the higher offense; yet it can not be doubted that such' a plea is applicable to all 'and each of the counts of the indictment, and, therefore, if there be good and bad counts in the indictment .the plea oif guilty will be referred to that one which is good. The plea oif guilty confesses the truth of 'whatever is well alleged in ‘the indictment. See 1 Bish. Cr. Proc., 795. If then the 'contention of the appellant is correct, that the first count of the indictment here is the only good count, the judgment upon the plea of guilty must be referred to that count. There being in the exceptions before this Court no allegation oif insufficiency in the first count of the indictment nor of error in the judgment pronounced upon the plea of guilty to this first count, it necessary follows that the judgment below must be .affirmed upon this ground, irrespective of the questions as to the sufficiency of the second and third counts of the indictment.

While this conclusion might properly be considered' as rendering speculative the questions raised by the 'exceptions taken to the judgment below, it may nevertheless be advisable that ttiese questions also should be determined They will, therefore, now be considered.

2 The first exception is couched in such general terms as, apparently, to render it liable to the objection 'that it does not point out with sufficient certainty the alleged error of which complaint is sought to be made. Waiving this consideration, however, it appears from the argument of the appellant before this Court that one of *294 the defects in the second and third .counts of the indictment, of which appellant sedes to complain by thi's exception, is claimed „ta consist in the alleged failure to charge in said count ¡any intent to. defraud on the part ¡of the defendant Zimmerman in the averred acts, of forgery and of uttering the forged wiriting.

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Related

State v. Brandt
713 S.E.2d 591 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2011)
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649 S.E.2d 41 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 2007)
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388 A.2d 122 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.E. 680, 79 S.C. 289, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zimmerman-sc-1908.