79 Ga. 344 | Ga. | 1888
The defendant demurred in writing to the entire indictment on various grounds, but none of them referred specially to the second count, nor did any of them allege, as objections to its sufficiency, that it failed to charge an intent by the defendant to defraud, or that he uttered the forged paper as true. If these objections had been made, they should have been sustained, but as the first count contained a valid and sufficient charge of forgery, the court did right in overruling the demurrer as made.
The point arose there upon the verdict itself which found defendant “ guilty of publishing and passing the receipt in question, knowing it to be a forgery.” This verdict was held to be a mere nullity upon which no judgment could be founded, because it failed to find that the defendant passed the paper as true, and with intent to defraud. !
The ruling in Couoli’s case is affirmed in the case of Stephens vs. The State, 56 Ga. 604, in which the defendant in one count of the indictment was charged with having falsely and fraudulently passed and uttered as true a forged order for goods, and a similar verdict was rendered.
In the case of Hoskins vs. The State, 11 Ga. 92, the defendant was indicted fdr forging a paper called an order,
In the case now under consideration, the paper was an order for money; and therefore under the above ruling, defendant should have been indicted under section 4442 of the code. It was further insisted by the State’s counsel that even if this section did apply, the second count in the indictment was sufficient, because it substantially alleged all that was necessary; but this position is not tenable, first, because there is no pretence that the uttering as true was alleged at all; and second, because the intent to defraud must be distinctly alleged.
The court by its charge put the case under section 4450 of the code, using the language thereof, and stating to the jury that'the punishment, in case of conviction, would be imprisonment in the penitentiary from two to ten years.
Error was properly assigned upon this charge, the case, as has been shown, falling under section 4442, which prescribes a punishment of not less than four nor more than ten years in the penitentiary.
The judgment below is reversed.