38 S.W. 1008 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1897
Appellant was convicted of swindling, and obtaining thereby personal property in an amount exceeding $50 in value, and given ten years in the penitentiary; hence this appeal. The indictment charges that defendant obtained a diamond ring, of the value of $280, and a diamond pin, of the value of $220, from the prosecutor, in consideration of the following check or writing obligatory: "Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 26, 1896. No. 3. Missouri National Bank, pay to J.E. Mitchell, or order, $500.00, five hundred dollars. J.W. Brown, Union Bank Note, K. C., Mo." The representations set forth in the indictment in connection therewith are substantially as follows: That he (the said J.W. Brown) was then and there the owner and had the right to dispose of said check, and that he falsely and fraudulently represented to said Mitchell that said check was a legal and valid obligation, and that he (said Brown) had the right and authority to draw and *105
dispose of the same, and that he had money to the amount of $500 on deposit in said Missouri National Bank, subject to his order, check, and disposal, and that he had credit at said Missouri National Bank to the extent of $500, and that said written instrument and check would be paid by said Missouri National Bank whenever presented there for payment, etc. In our opinion, the indictment is sufficient in this respect to charge the offense of swindling under our statute. If, on the trial, evidence was given to sustain either allegation of the indictment in connection with said check, to-wit: that he (said Brown) had money to the amount of $500 on deposit in said bank, subject to his order, etc., or that he had credit at said Missouri National Bank, etc., to the extent of $500, and that said check would be paid when presented to said bank, and the evidence should further show that these representations were false, the State's case would be made out. But the evidence simply showed, in effect, that defendant came to the jewelry store of the prosecutor, and first bought a ring for $ 175, and gave the prosecutor a check for that amount, but afterwards, on the same day, returned to the store, bringing the ring back, stating that he desired to exchange it. The defendant then selected a diamond ring and a diamond pin, and asked prosecutor what he would take for both, and was told that he could have the ring for $280 and the pin for $220, and he agreed to take them at that price, and they were delivered to him. Defendant then asked prosecutor for the check which he had given for the ring in the morning, and prosecutor gave it to him. Defendant then gave prosecutor a check for $500 for the ring and pin, said check being the same as set out in the indictment. At the time, defendant showed prosecutor a certificate of deposit in the First National Bank of Fort Worth for $20,225, and stated that he could give him a check on that bank, but that was firm money, and he preferred to give a check on his own personal account with the Missouri National Bank of Kansas City, Mo. Prosecutor tesified that he parted with the possession and title of the diamond ring and pin to the defendant wholly upon the strength and by reason of the $500 check which defendant gave in payment therefor, and relied upon said check for payment for said diamond pin and ring. On this subject the court charged the jury, at the instance of the State, as follows: "The jury are charged that in a case of swindling, it is not necessary that the pretenses, devices and fraudulent representations should be in words. There may be a sufficient false pretense and device and fradulent representation in the acts and conduct of the party, without any verbal representations of a fraudulent nature. The mere act of giving a check is a representation that the drawer of the check has sufficient funds on deposit with the drawee, or sufficient credit with such drawee, to give such a check, and that the same will be paid when presented to such drawee." The defendant saved a bill of exceptions to this charge, and assigns the same as error. The first portion of this charge, as an abstract proposition of law is correct, to-wit, false pretenses may consist in acts. Mr. Wharton says (See, 2 Whar. Crim. Law, § 1170): "The conduct and *106
acts of the party will be sufficient, without any verbal assertion." He cites several illustrations, — among others, that of a person who assumed the garb of an Oxford University student and by such garb and conduct represented himself as a student of said university, and so obtained goods. It was held that the false pretenses were complete, though not a word passed as to his status. And this doctrine is announced by our own court in the case of Blum v. State, 20 Tex.Crim. App., 578, cited by the Assistant Attorney-General. That was a case of a merchant who had formerly dealt with the prosecutor, and had represented to him that the business was his own. On the the day of the alleged swindle, at 12 o'clock, the defendant, Blum, secretly sold out his business to his wife and daughter, and thereafter purchased goods of the prosecutor to the amount of about $90. The court in that case say "that no false pretenses in words were made by the appellant, for he was not present in person, and none are shown to have been made by the wife and father-in-law of appellant, who acted as his agents in the purchase of the goods, that Goodman, the prosecutor, may have entertained the opinion that the appellant still owned the property in the bakery and grocery, and made the sale upon the belief that he still owned said property. But this did not affect the question, unless the acts of the parties in purchasing the goods induced that belief at the time. It was simply an error of opinion upon the part of the prosecutor in parting with his goods, and the knowledge of the fact that he was acting upon such belief or opinion, without correcting it, will not subject the defendant or his agents to a charge of having made a false pretense by withholding the information which would have corrected that belief. It was his own opinion as to the existence of a fact which did not exist, and not the acts, declarations, or representations of the parties with whom he was trading, which caused him to be deceived." In that case it was held that the principle above announced did not apply, and that there were no such acts and conduct as constituted a fraudulent representation. Mr. Bishop (2 Bishop's New Crim. Law, § 421) cites the following case from the English courts: Where a prisoner was charged with falsely pretending that the postdated check given by himself was a good and genuine order for £25 and of the value of £25, whereby he obtained a watch and chain, and the jury found that, before the completion of the sale and delivery of the watch by the prosecutor to the prisoner, he represented to the prosecutor that he had an account with the bankers on whom the check was drawn, and that he had a right to draw the check, though he postdated it for his own convenience, all of which were false, and that he represented that the check would be paid on or after the day of the date, but that he had no reasonable ground to believe that it would be paid, or that he had the funds to pay it, he was held to be properly convicted. Id.; 2 Whar. Crim. Law, § 1163. In this case, it will be seen that the instrument was in the nature of an after promise: but it will also be observed that, in connection with said instrument, there was a present representation of an existing fact which was, to-wit, *107
that he had an account with the bank on whom the check was drawn, and that he had a right to draw the check. In a note to these cases, Lesser v. People,
We have examined the authorities accessible to us at this point, and have found no case where the mere drawing of a check on a bank, in which the defendant has no funds and has no credit, will constitute the offense of swindling, and we believe no well-considered case will be found holding such to be the case. In the case of Martin v. State,
Reversed and Remanded.