57 Md. 108 | Md. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore, and the case was removed to the Circuit Court for Howard County, for trial. The indictment contains four counts ; the first charging the appellant with forging a check with intent to defraud ; the second with uttering it with intent to defraud; the third with forging it with intent to defraud the Merchants’ National Bank, and the fourth with uttering it with intent to defraud the Merchants’ National Bank. The appellant pleaded not guilty, and the jury having found a verdict of guilty, he took this appeal for tlie purpose of having the rulings of
The State proved by Thomas H. Morris, the paying teller of the bank, that, shortly after three o’clock on the 16th day of July, 1880, a man, who the witness testified was the appellant, entered the bank and presented at the desk of the paying teller, where witness was standing, the check described in the indictment, and said, “ I am a little late;” to which witness replied “yes, you are late;” and the person then said, “I have sold some bonds to Mr. Fisher, and I would be obliged if you would accommodate me by giving me large money for the check as 1 have some money to pay up street; ” that witness replied that he had no large money, and then paid him the amount of the check from money in the drawer, consisting principally of ten dollar notes. The State then offered to prove by the same witness, that, on the following day, the 17th day of July, the same party came to the hank in the morning, during banking hours, and presented another check, similar, except in its amount, to that which had been presented by him and paid the previous day, and remarked, “I am not late to-day;” to which witness replied, “ no, you are.not late to-day.” The party then stated that ho had sold some more bonds to Mr. Fisher, and again made the request that he might be paid in large money ; £,nd the witness went to the vault, obtained large notes and paid the amount of the check. The State then offered to prove that this second check, as also that which was presented and paid the day previously, was a forgery. The appellant, by his counsel, objected to the admissibility of the conversation, and everything connected with the presentation and payment of the second check and the proof that it was forged, because the appellant had been indicted and tried before a jury and acquitted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore, for forging and Tittering said check; contending, in support of
The proof, as offered by the State was clearly admissible. If it can be shown that a party indicted for uttering forged paper upon a bank, has, within a short period of time passed other forged paper on the same bank, it is plain that such repeated utterings show a plan to defraud the bank, and in such case each uttering is admissible, in evidence, as tending to prove the intent with which each uttering is committed. Whart. Cr. Ev., see. 43 ; Queen vs. Francis, 12 Cox’s C. C., 612. It is not often possible to prove by positive and direct evidence that a party who utters a forged paper, has a knowledge that it is forged. When it has been proved that the party charged has done the act for which he is indicted, the question still remains, whether he committed' it with guilty knowledge or whether he acted under a mistake; and evidence which tends to prove that he was pursuing a course of similar acts, raises a presumption that he was not acting under
But even if the appellant .had, in fact, offered in evidence the record of the appellant’s acquittal, and had proved that the appellant was the same party who had been so acquitted, we cannot perceive that the Court below committed any error in overruling the objection," and admitting the evidence offered by the State. An acquittal of a party does not ascertain or determine any precise facts. It may have resulted from an insufficiency of evidence as to some particular fact, where several facts are necessary ingredients of the crime. 2 Coweris Fhill.Ev., (4th Amer. Ed.,) 55, 56; Foscoe’s Or. Ev., 14ih Ed., ,194.
Such an acquittal upon an indictment for uttering a forged check, would not necessarily . negative the fact that the check was forged, if in fact it.;was forged; nor the possession by the party of the forged paper, for the uttering of which he was indicted; nor that be. uttered the forged paper for value. All these facts may have been found to he true, and yet the pariy may have been acquitted because of the absence of proof of such facts and circumstances, as were necessary to show that the accused uttered the forged paper with intent to defraud. The verdict of acquittal may have resulted from the fact that
It has frequently been decided, that an acquittal of forging, or uttering a particular forged paper, will not preclude the State from proving the fact of the possession or the uttering .of such forged paper in another prosecution against the same party for a crime of the same actor. This principle was fully recognized and applied in the following cases: Smith vs. Dougherty, 4 City Hall (N. Y.,) Recorder, 167, 168; Smith vs. Houston, 1 Bailey, (S. C.) Reps., 300 ; McCartney vs. State, 3 Ind., 354; State vs. Jesse, 3 Dev. & Batt. Law, 103, 108, 109 ; People vs.
After the evidence contained in the first exception, the State further proved by Morris, the facts stated in its offer in the first exception, regarding the presentation and payment of the second check of July 17th, and that the appellant was the party who presented both checks, and received the money therefor, and then proved by Mr. Fisher and Mr. Orrick that both checks were forgeries, and that the name of Mr. Fisher thereon was forged, and also offered other evidence tending to prove the guilt of the appellant, and then closed its case.
The appellant, by his counsel, then under permission of the Court as stated in the first exception, offered in evidence the record of acquittal of George Bell, alias George W. Kimball, on an indictment in the Criminal Court of Baltimore, for forging and uttei'ing the check of the 17th July, 1880, and then closed. In arguing the case before the jury, the counsel of the appellant contended that the record of acquittal was conclusive of the case then on trial, that it was conclusive of the fact that the appellant was not the party who passed, uttered or forged the check of July 17; that the State was estopped by such acquittal from contending in this case, that such was not the law ; and that the jury being the judges of the law, as well as of fact in criminal cases, they had the right, and were hound to receive and regard said record of acquittal as thus conclusive,' and the State as thus estopped. The Court, upon objection being made to such argument, interposed and refused to permit the counsel for the appellant so to argue, upon the ground that they had expressly decided, as stated in the first exception, that it was competent for the State on this trial, to prove that said second check was a forgery, and was passed and uttered by the prisoner, and that said record of acquittal
Rulings affirmed, and cause remanded.