The People v. Langguth

180 N.E. 464, 347 Ill. 500
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1932
DocketNo. 20714. Affirmed as to Langguth; reversed and remanded as to Lindgren.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 N.E. 464 (The People v. Langguth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Langguth, 180 N.E. 464, 347 Ill. 500 (Ill. 1932).

Opinions

Elmer P. Langguth and Laverne D. Lindgren were convicted in Cook county upon an indictment charging them with unlawfully, deceitfully, willfully, knowingly and corruptly making and causing to be made a false and fraudulent statement, and unlawfully, deceitfully, willfully, knowingly and corruptly causing such statement to be subscribed by Langguth and with delivering such statement to Fred R. Pope and Paul R. Wilkinson, auditors appointed by the Auditor of Public Accounts to make an examination of the affairs of the People's State Bank of Maywood, a bank organized under the statute of the State of Illinois to revise the law in relation to banks and banking, of which Langguth was president and Miss Lindgren *Page 502 cashier. The indictment further charged that the statement was false in stating the resources and liabilities of the bank, in this: That it stated that loans on collateral security amounted to $177,467.23 and overdrafts amounted to $140.42; that demand deposits amounted to $165,338.17; that the liabilities shown omitted the amount of $40,000, being two deposits made in the bank by the Bellwood State Bank, amounting to $50,000 less drafts of the amount of $10,000, whereas the defendants knew the loans on collateral security amounted to $172,467.23, the demand deposits to $284,020.24 and the overdrafts to $2753.73, and that the acts of making and subscribing the statement and delivering it to the bank examiners were willfully, unlawfully, deceitfully, knowingly, corruptly and feloniously done with intent to deceive them. The defendants were sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary and have sued out this writ of error.

The first error assigned is that the court refused to quash the indictment on the alleged ground of duplicity, and it is argued that the indictment, which consisted of one count, only, charges that the defendants made and caused to be made a false statement and caused it to be subscribed by Langguth and delivered it to Pope and Wilkinson as a true statement, and that these acts are repugnant to one another, because, while either or both defendants could make the statement or could cause it to be made, both defendants could not both make it and cause it to be made, and while Langguth's co-defendant could cause him to sign the statement both defendants could not cause him to sign it; that each of these acts is a distinct and separate offense, and the count charging them conjunctively is bad for duplicity.

The Banking act declares that any officer, director or employee of any bank or association organized under its provisions who shall willfully and knowingly subscribe to or make or cause to be made any false statement with intent *Page 503 to deceive any person or persons authorized to examine into the affairs of such bank or association, upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary. The act against which this section of the statute is directed is the willful deception by an officer, director or employee of a bank of any person authorized to examine into its affairs, by a false statement, whether made by the officer, director or employee personally or caused by him to be made by another or given authenticity by his signing the statement made by another. In either case but one crime has been committed, whether only one or all the acts mentioned by the statute have been done by the accused. "If, as is common in legislation, a statute makes it punishable to do a particular thing specified, or another thing, or another, one commits the offense who does any one of the things, or any two or more or all of them, and the indictment may charge him with any one or with any larger number, at the election of the pleader, employing, if the allegation is of more than one, the conjunction 'and' where 'or' occurs in the statute." (Bishop on Stat. Crimes, sec. 244.) This doctrine was followed in Blemer v. People, 76 Ill. 265, and People v. Reed, 287 id. 606. In Hoyt v.People, 140 Ill. 588, the defendant was convicted on an indictment which charged that he and a co-defendant agreed to burn an elevator and in pursuance of their agreement did burn it. A motion to quash the indictment for duplicity was made and overruled, and upon a writ of error it was held that the conspiracy was merged in the consummated act of burning, and that the count charged only the offense of arson and not the independent offenses of a conspiracy to commit arson and arson. The same principle, that when a penal statute mentions several acts disjunctively and prescribes that each shall constitute the same offense and is subject to the same punishment all or any of such acts may be charged conjunctively as constituting a single offense, is announced in State v. Pirkey, 22 S.D. 559,State v. Kerr, *Page 504 3 N.D. 523, State v. Conner, 30 Ohio St. 405, State v. Haven,59 Vt. 309, State v. Brady, 16 R.I. 51, Byrne v. State, 12 Wis. 519, Sprouse v. Commonwealth, 81 Va. 374,People v. Harold, 84 Cal. 567, and State v.Nations, 75 Mo. 53. The court did not err in overruling the motion to quash the indictment.

It is next contended that the court erred in admitting in evidence testimony that a note for $5000, dated January 29, 1930, purporting to be signed by John Braeseke, was not signed by him or by his authority but was signed by one of the employees of the bank under the direction of Langguth, who told her that Braeseke was in California and that Langguth had sent him a note to be signed which had not been returned but he expected it in a day or two, and he wanted the note to be in the vault while the auditors were in the bank and that when the new note came in he could replace the old one. At that time the bank examiners were in the bank. Pope, one of the bank examiners, testified that the Braeseke note was a forgery, and two other witnesses referred to it as a forgery. On objection this testimony was stricken out and the jury was instructed to disregard it. Braeseke testified that he was in California from October 11, 1929, until May 27, 1930, and that he did not sign the note and did not authorize any other person to sign his name. It is objected that the evidence in regard to this note tended to prove a different crime from that charged in the indictment, that its admission was prejudicial to the defendant, and that the exclusion of the statements of the witnesses that the note was a forgery and the instruction to the jury to disregard such statements did not cure the error. The testimony that the note was not signed by the purported maker or by anybody authorized by him was competent to show that it was not an asset of the bank and that the statement which included it among the resources of the bank was false. Because it was competent evidence of a fact material to the issue it was admissible in evidence whether it tended *Page 505 to prove another crime or not. The statement of the witnesses that the note was a forgery added nothing to the effect of the facts proved. The court struck out these statements, and the fact that the jury heard them does not require or justify the reversal of the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
180 N.E. 464, 347 Ill. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-langguth-ill-1932.