Appellant was convicted of forgery, and his punishment assessed at two years' confinement in the State penitentiary. From the judgment and sentence of the lower court he prosecutes this appeal. The instrument charged to have been forged is as follows: "$32 50/100. Bonham, Texas, June 6th, 1893. Due on October 1st, after date, I, we, or either of us promise to pay to the order of J.P. Holmes, Pres. Bonham Nat'l Bank, thirty-two and 50/100 dollars, *Page 183
value received, payable at the Bonham National Bank, at Bonham, Texas, with interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from maturity, and ten per cent. additional on the amount of this note and interest as attorney's fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. H.A. Campbell. A Clinard. W.W. Linard." The purport of this instrument is set out in the indictment. It is alleged that the instrument purports to be the acts of others, to-wit: the acts of A. Clinard and M.W. Leonard. The tenor clause of the indictment describes the note as having been signed by H.A. Campbell, A Clinard, and W.W. Linard. The instrument does not purport to be the act of A. Clinard and M.W. Leonard, but the act of H.A. Campbell, A. Clinard, and W.W. Linard. We find a conflict between the purport and the tenor of the indictment; in other words, the allegation that the note purports to be the act of A. Clinard and M.W. Leonard is not sustained by the instrument itself. There is a variance between the tenor and purport clauses in the indictment. This being the case, what is the rule of law? Mr. Bishop (section 416, 3d Ed., of his work on Criminal Procedure) says: "Where the purport is alleged, whether necessarily or not, the allegation must be, in terms, harmonious with the tenor, or the indictment will be ill. If, for example, the name of the maker of the alleged note appears, however unnecessarily, in the purport clause, yet, if varies from the name given in the tenor clause, the repugnance will be fatal. So an allegation that the forged check appears to be on the City National Bank of Dallas is repugnant to a setting out of the check in the tenor clause as on the City Bank, omitting the word 'Dallas,' and it will render the count bad." Roberts v. State, 2 Tex.Crim. App., 4, and authorities cited; State v. Farrand, 8 N.J. Law, 333; State v. Bean,
Reversed and Dismissed.