11 Ind. 361 | Ind. | 1858
Indictment for forgery. 'The offense charged consisted in the uttering, as true, a false and forged deed to a piece of land.
This deed, so executed to him by Brewster, Colvin took to Lesman, uttered it as a genuine deed, and placed it with him on deposit as an equitable mortgage of the land, in security for his board-bill.
The question is whether the. act constituted the crime of forgery, under the following statute:
“ Every person who shall falsely make, or assist to make,’ deface, destroy, alter, forge, or counterfeit,” &c., “ any record, deed, will, codicil, bond,” &c.; “or any person who shall utter, or publish as true, any such instrument, knowing the same,” &c., “with intent to defraud,” &c., “shall be deemed guilty of forgery.” 2 R. S. p. 412, § 30.
The deed was deposited for boarding already had, not to secure the price of future boarding; nor did the depositor board, or, at the time of the deposit, intend to board longer with Lesmcm, as the latter well knew.
The indictment contains but a single count, charges the uttering of the deed to Lesman, and specially avers the intent, in so doing, to have been to defraud him.
We think the.case is not made out. No fraud appears to have been perpetrated upon Lesman. The debt already
Had Colvin been indicted for the forgery, with intent generally to defraud, such an indictment might, probably, have been. sustained against him. See Wilkinson v. The Slate, 10 Ind. R. 372.
Per Curiam. — The judgment is reversed, and the clerk ordered to notify the keeper of the penitentiary to return the prisoner to the Allen county jail.