64 So. 534 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The appellants were charged with forging an application made in the name of another person for insurance on his life. In three of the counts of the indictment the contents of the instrument alleged to have been forged were disclosed by averring that it “was in words and figures substantially as follows,” and then attaching by metal fasteners to the sheet of paper on which the preceding portion of the count was typewritten a printed form of such application, with blank spaces filled in and subscribed in the name of James Walker Bryant. The question of the propriety or sufficiency of this method of setting out the instrument alleged to have been forged was raised successively by a motion to strike, by a motion to quash, and by demurrers to the three counts mentioned. The motions and the demurrers were overruled.
Assuming that there was some impropriety in the method adopted for disclosing the subject of the alleged
By demurrers to the several counts of the indictment a question was raised as to the sufficiency of their averments to show that the instrument charged to have been falsely made with intent to. in juré or defraud was such a one as could be the subject of forgery. In several of the counts the instrument was set out at length, and on its face it purported to be a formal application of James Walker Bryant to the New York Life Insurance Company for insurance on his life in' the sum of $10,000, to be made payable to one of the defendants, Avho was stated in the application to be a friend and business associate of the applicant. We think that it is plain that such an instrument may be the subject of forgery under the accepted definitions of that offense. “Falsely making any writing, with a fraudulent intent, whereby another may be prejudiced, is forgery. It is not necessary that any prejudice should in fact have happened by reason of the fraud. The capacity of the false and fraudulent writing to work injury is the ma
The claim is advanced that the writing set out in the indictment in this case belongs to the class of instruments, instances of which are found in the Alabama reports, in reference to Avhich, either because the writing is incomplete, obscure, or unintelligible, or does not appear to have any legal validity, or shoAV that it might have an effect prejudicial to some one other than its maker, it is requisite, in an indictment for the forgery of it, in order to disclose its capacity to work prejudice to another, to aver the existence of extrinsic facts by its connection with which it acquired a meaning and a power to harm. — Fomby v. State, 87 Ala. 36, 6 South. 271; Williams v. State, 90 Ala. 649, 8 South. 825; Glenn v. State, 116 Ala. 483, 23 South. 1. We cannot concur in this view. That Avriting, as already has been stated,
The counsel for the appellants have called to our attention the case of Commonwealth v. Dunleay, 157 Mass. 386, 32 N. E. 356, in which it was held that an indictment charging the forgery of an application for insurance was insufficient because of its failure to aver the existence of acts disclosing how the instrument mentioned could have been used to the benefit of the defendant or the prejudice of anybody else. The writing which was the subject of the charge made in that case is not set out in the report, and we are not informed of its terms or import further than that it was an application for insurance. If that decision may be understood as affirming that an indictment for the forgery of such an instrument as the one set out in the indictment in the instant case, an'd alleged to have been falsely made by the defendants, with intent to injure or defraud, requires the averment of other facts to enable the court to discover how it could have been used' to the prejudice of any one other than, its maker, the conclusion there announced, is one in which we cannot con
As the instrument set out in the indictment is not one which by statute is made the subject of forgery in either the first or second degrees, the offense charged is forgery in the third degree. — Code, § 6916.
The only rulings of which complaint has been made by the counsel for the appellants are those above discussed. Other rulings which are presented for review are not such as to merit discussion. We have discovered no reversiblé error in the record.
The statement in the judgment appealed from of dates for the beginning and termination of the terms of hard labor to which the defendants were sentenced was surplusage. That judgment will be corrected here by striking that statement from it. As thus corrected, it will be affirmed.
Corrected and affirmed.