The People v. Moone

166 N.E. 481, 334 Ill. 590
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1929
DocketNo. 18829. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 N.E. 481 (The People v. Moone) 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. Moone, 166 N.E. 481, 334 Ill. 590 (Ill. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error, George M. Moone, was indicted by the grand jury of Cook county, in an indictment of four counts, for the crime of forgery. The first count charges that Moone on June 20, 1925, having in his possession a genuine, valid and unpaid check for $179.20, payable to the order of Flanagan & McGurk and signed by Peterson, Turnbull & Co., by W. A. Peterson, drawn on the Drovers National Bank of Chicago, did feloniously, fraudulently and falsely make, alter, forge and counterfeit said check, and that the alteration was in the figures $5979.20. The second count charges that Moone on June 20, 1925, did make, alter, forge and counterfeit a certain check, No. 4181, of Peterson, Turnbull & Co., Union Stock Yards, Chicago, dated Chicago, May 20, 1925, payable to the order of Flanagan & McGurk, in the sum of $5979.20, signed Peterson, Turnbull & Co., by W. A. Peterson, and drawn on the Drovers National Bank of Chicago. The third count charges that Moone on June 20, 1925, did falsely pass as true and genuine a false, altered, forged and counterfeit check as follows, (the same check described in the second count is here described,) well knowing the same to be false, forged and counterfeited. The fourth count charges that Moone on June 20, 1925, having in his possession a genuine, valid and unpaid check for $179.20, payable to the order of Flanagan & McGurk, signed Peterson, Turnbull & Co., by W. A. Peterson, and drawn on the Drovers National Bank, altered said check, which altered check is in words and figures as follows, (the check described in counts 2 and 3 is here described,) with intent to prejudice, damage and defraud William A. Peterson and William Turnbull, co-partners, the same intent being alleged in the other three counts. Plaintiff in error was twice tried in the criminal court of Cook county. The first trial resulted in a disagreement of the jury. On the second trial he was found guilty by a jury, and after his motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled he was sentenced by the court to serve an indeterminate term in the penitentiary. He brings the record to this court for review on error.

The contentions of plaintiff in error in this court are, first, that the court erred in permitting the State, over his objections, to introduce incompetent, improper and prejudicial testimony; and second, that the specific intent to damage and defraud alleged in the indictment is not sustained by the evidence.

On June 20, 1925, plaintiff in error was employed as book-keeper in the office of Peterson, Turnbull & Co., a co-partnership between William A. Peterson and William Turnbull, engaged in buying and selling livestock in the Union Stock Yards, Chicago, and had held that position since February, 1919. A. L. Donahue, employed as a hog salesman by Peterson, Turnbull & Co., as well as the co-partners, had authority to sign checks of that firm. Joseph P. Coates, a hog dealer, had his office with Peterson, Turnbull & Co. and his accounts were guaranteed by that firm. When Coates bought hogs the firm paid for them and when he sold hogs the firm collected the money for them. Coates sometimes bought hogs from Flanagan & McGurk and frequently sold hogs to them. Peterson, Turnbull & Co. issued its checks to Flanagan & McGurk for the hogs so purchased and received checks from that firm for the hogs sold to it by Coates. Donahue sometimes sold hogs for speculators working out of the office of Flanagan & McGurk, and the money for these hogs would be paid to Flanagan & McGurk by Peterson, Turn-bull & Co. The evidence in the record, however, shows that there were no large business transactions between Peterson, Turnbull & Co. and Flanagan & McGurk in June and July, 1925. The practice in the office of Peterson, Turnbull & Co. with reference to checks was for plaintiff in error to fill out the checks to be issued by that firm and present them to Peterson, Turnbull or Donahue for signature. Often the checks were presented for signature by plaintiff in error and signed with merely the name of the payee and the amounts for which the checks should be given, written in figures, and after they were signed the amounts for which the checks would be given were written in the other blank space with a check protector by plaintiff in error. Peterson, Turnbull & Co. did all of its banking business with the Drovers National Bank, and frequently, when large amounts of money were paid by that firm for hogs purchased and collections were delayed, the firm’s account would be overdrawn at the bank and it would sign demand notes to the bank to cover the deficit. In such cases the bank would call plaintiff in error and he would make out a demand note for the amount requested, in the same manner that he made out checks, to be signed by either Peterson or Turnbull and sent to the bank.

William A. Peterson, one of the members of the firm of Peterson, Turnbull & Co., testified, in substance, as follows: People’s exhibit 1, which is the check described in the indictment, bears his signature. He signed that check before it had been detached from the check stub. At the time he signed it, it was made out payable to Flanagan & McGurk for $179.20. The $179.20 was written in ink in the margin, but the body of the check, or the space provided for writing out in full the amount of the check in words, was not filled out. He signed the check about five o’clock in the afternoon of June 19, 1925, and did not on that afternoon sign a check to Flanagan & McGurk for $5979.20. The check book stub for People’s exhibit 1 was filled out in the handwriting of plaintiff in error. This stub, besides the printed matter, has on it in writing, “Flanagan & McG. 5179.20.” Witness’ signature also appears on People’s exhibit 4 — a check of Peterson, Turnbull & Co., payable to Eugene Finn, dated June 16, 1925, for $300. At the time he signed that check it was for $30, and he did not on June 16, 1925, sign a check payable to Eugene Finn for $300. He also identified the check stub for People’s exhibit 4. The written matter thereon, identified by him as the handwriting of plaintiff in error, is, “E. Finn 300.00.” He never received People’s exhibit 5, which is a check for $300, dated June 19, 1925, signed by E. J. Finn, payable to George Moone and drawn on the Stock Yards Savings Bank and which is indorsed, “Loretta Moone.” He also identified as bearing his signature six other checks of Peterson, Turnbull & Co. payable to Flanagan & Mc-Gurk, two dated June 18 and the others dated June 25, June 27, July 6 and July 13, 1925, for the amounts of $1265.70, $5973.12, $6590, $9129, $19,512.40 and $15,-556.33, respectively. These checks were written by plaintiff in error, and when witness signed them they were not made out for the amounts shown on their faces. He also identified as bearing his signature a check dated July 14, 1925, for $27,020.25, payable to the Drovers National Bank, and stated that he did not on that day sign a check in that amount to take up a note at the Drovers National Bank. On July 20, 1925, the firm of Peterson, Turnbull & Co. had a demand note in the Drovers National Bank for $40,000, and after witness had had a conversation with an official at the bank with reference to this note he had a talk with plaintiff in error, in which he asked him if Coates had sent up any tickets for hogs sold. Plaintiff in error said that Coates had not. Witness then asked him to send a boy down into the yards to have Coates send up some tickets.

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Bluebook (online)
166 N.E. 481, 334 Ill. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-moone-ill-1929.