124 Mass. 327 | Mass. | 1878
This indictment is defective. The charge against the defendant is that of “ forging an indorsement in and upon a certain promissory note.” The statute for the punishment of forgeries includes “indorsement” as a subject of forgery; but it does not thereby authorize the pleader simply to charge that an indorsement has been forged, any more than it would authorize the simple allegation that the party charged has forged a “ public record ” or a certificate of a public officer in relation to a matter wherein such “ certificate may be received as legal proof,” “ a will,” or “ a bond,” or “ a policy of insurance,” or “ a bill of exchange,” or “ an accountable receipt; ” but such facts must be set forth in the indictment as show that the crime
The words, “with intent thereby then and there to mjure and defraud,”- are words essential to the offence as charged, but do not enlarge the signification of the language which avers the facts necessary to be proved in order to constitute the offence.
The averment that the note is lost does not obviate the necessity of setting forth that which is necessary to show that the words alleged to be forged bore such relation to it as to be the subject of forgery. Indictment quashed.