105 A. 147 | Md. | 1918
The appellant was convicted under an indictment which charged that he, Erba Armacost,
"unlawfully and wilfully did obtain certain credits, goods and wares of the value of one hundred and thirty-two dollars current money of the United States from a certain Vincent T. Caples, with intent then and there him the said Vincent T. Caples to defraud by means of a certain check drawn upon the First National Bank of Hampstead (a body corporate), not indebted to the said Erba Armacost, the said Erba Armacost not providing for the payment and acceptance of the said check, the same not being paid upon presentation * * *."
A demurrer to the indictment was filed on the ground that it omits to allege the nature or ownership of the "credits, goods and wares" to which it refers. The principal question on this appeal is whether the demurrer was properly overruled.
The statute under which the appellant was indicted is codified as section 123 of Article 27 of the Code of Public General Laws, having been enacted by Chapter 281 of the Acts of 1914. It provides in part as follows:
"Every person who, with intent to cheat and defraud another, shall obtain money, credit, goods, wares or anything of value by means of a check, draft or any *291 other negotiable instrument of any kind drawn upon any bank, person, firm or corporation, not indebted to drawer, or where he has not provided for the payment or acceptance, and the same be not paid upon presentation, shall be deemed to have obtained such money, credit, goods or things of value by means of a false pretense, and upon conviction shall be fined or imprisoned, or both, as provided in Section 122 of this Article, at the discretion of the Court."
By section 122 it is provided:
"Any person who shall by any false pretense obtain from any other person any chattel, money, or valuable security, with intent to defraud any person of the same, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the discretion of the Court, to be punished by fine and imprisonment, or by confinement in the penitentiary for not less than two years nor more than ten years, as the Court shall award * * *."
In the case of State v. Blizzard,
It is said in 11 Ruling Case Law, pp. 860, 861, that in indictments for obtaining goods under false pretenses the property should be sufficiently described "to enable the jury to decide whether the chattel proved to have been obtained is the same as that upon which the indictment was founded," and that "the numerical weight of authority is to the effect that in the absence of statute the indictment must allege directly and distinctly the ownership of the property obtained, or state some legal excuse for omitting that averment," citing, with other cases, State v. Blizzard, supra. The text of Cyc, Vol. 19, pp. 432, 434, is to the same general effect. The requirements as to the statement of ownership and nature of the property, in false pretense cases, were observed in the indictments under consideration in Jules v. State,
In the present case, as in State v. Blizzard, supra, the allegation that the property was obtained from a designated person could not be held to be equivalent to an averment that he was the owner; and here the indictment gives no information whatever as to the nature of the property, while in the former case the indictment did describe, though imperfectly, the securities obtained by the alleged fraud.
The indictment before us must, therefore, be held insufficient unless it can be sustained upon the theory, submitted by the prosecution, that it follows the language of the statute by which the act of obtaining money, credit or property, with intent to defraud, by means of a worthless check, is treated and penalized as a special form of false pretense.
It is a settled rule that a statutory offense is sufficiently charged if the indictment describes it in the language of the statute by which it is created. State v. Edwards, supra;Mulkern v. State,
There are numerous exceptions to the rulings on the admissibility of evidence, but in our review of them we have discovered no reversible error.
Judgment reversed and case remanded. *295