104 So. 901 | Ala. | 1925
Lead Opinion
The act of 1915 was given consideration in Hotel Supply Co. v. Reid,
"While the evidence shows that there were no funds on deposit to plaintiff's credit at the bank on which the check made the basis of the prosecution was drawn, the evidence is in conflict as to whether this was known to the defendant at the time the check was given, and as to whether the defendant procured the check to be given and postdated with the knowledge that the plaintiff was without funds on deposit to pay the check. * * *"
And it was held that "defendant was therefore not entitled to the affirmative charge." This case is cited with approval — where design was omitted from an Arizona statute — in George v. Williams (Ariz.)
In Gustin v. State,
For illustration of the application of the statutes and the rules of evidence obtaining, we advert to the pleading and defendant's evidence thereunder. For convenient reference we take the indictment from the brief before us. It is within the provisions of the act of 1921, charging that defendant did "with intent to defraud" obtain from the hotel the sum of money named, "by means of a draft, of which he was the maker or drawer, and which draft was not paid by the drawee," setting out that instrument, and concluding with the averment that:
"Seven days' written notice has been given to the said C. P. Goolsby [defendant] of the drawee's refusal or failure to pay said draft, and the same has not been paid, against the peace and dignity of the state of Alabama." (Italics supplied.)
Such is the crime charged, and for which defendant stands convicted, under Acts 1921, p. 47.
Under this pleading, the state having made out the prima facie proof under the statute and closed its evidence, the defendant testified:
"The bank on which the draft in question was drawn had been in the habit of paying my drafts for many months prior to the date on which this draft was drawn, and later I took their other drafts up. I assumed that they would pay this one."
Thereupon the following transpired, as shown by brief of counsel:
"Defendant's counsel asked witness this question: 'Did you or not intend to defraud McLester Hotel or the two Snows when you gave them the draft and got their money?' The state objected, on the ground that witness could not testify to his uncommunicated motive or intention, and the court sustained the objection, and defendant excepted. Defendant then offered to show that he had no intention to defraud McLester Hotel when he gave the draft in question, but the court refused to allow this, and defendant again duly and legally excepted.
"Defendant's counsel asked the witness the following question: 'What was your intention at the time you gave the draft in question to McLester Hotel?' The state objected, on the ground that witness could not testify to his uncommunicated motive or intention, and the court sustained the objection, and defendant excepted. Defendant then offered to show that he had no intention to defraud McLester Hotel when he gave the draft in question, but the court refused to allow this, and defendant again duly and legally excepted."
Insisting that his conviction is unlawful, defendant contends that the cases cited by the Attorney General are without application; the state citing Ex parte King,
The statute condemned (Acts 1892-93, pp. 94, 95) in Carr v. State, supra, provided that any officer of a banking firm or corporation or any other person or agent thereof, engaged in the banking business, "who shall receive for deposit any bank notes, specie money, or other thing of value, knowing at the time said deposit is received, or having good cause to believe, that such bank, banking firm, corporation, person, or persons are in a failing or insolvent condition, shall for each offense be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor," and that: *353
"The payment back to the depositor of the bank notes, specie money, or other thing of value, deposited before the conviction hereunder, and the court costs thereof, which may have accumulated, shall be a good and lawful defense to any prosecution under this act."
Mr. Justice McClellan, in the Carr Case, supra, adverted to the distinction found in the provision of our present Constitution as article 1, § 20, "that no person shall be imprisoned for debt," from that contained in the several Constitutions — viz. of 1819, art. 1, § 18; 1861, art. 1, § 18; 1865, art. 1, § 22 — which excepted "causes of fraud." This provision in the former Constitutions was, "The person of a debtor, where there is not strong presumption of fraud, shall not be detained in prison, after delivering up his estate for the benefit of his creditors, in such manner as shall be prescribed by law," while the provision in the Constitutions of 1868 (article 1, § 22), of 1875 (article 1, § 21), and of 1901 (article 1, § 20) is "that no person shall be imprisoned for debt." The elimination of the exception as to fraud has been held to be "a pregnant omission, which left the guaranty of immunity from imprisonment to the debtor to apply to all cases of debt, whether they involved fraud or not." Ex parte Hardy,
In Ex parte Russellville,
"The statute involved in the case at bar is a much more flagrant attempt to authorize imprisonment for debt, in our opinion, than that denounced by the Supreme Court of Tennessee. State v. Paint Rock Coal Coke Co.,
This last case has not been departed from in this jurisdiction. In Bailey v. State,
"The Carr Case arose under a statute dissimilar to the one sub judice, as will be seen from a reading of the two statutes. The statute in that case held void sought to make the mere receiving, by a bank officer, of money for deposit, with knowledge at the time that the bank was in a failing or insolvent condition, a misdemeanor. It not only disregarded the intent of the person receiving the money, but provided that the fine which might be assessed on conviction should not be less than double the amount of the deposit. * * *"
The last-named case was taken by writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States, and the decisive opinion is to be found reported as Bailey v. State of Alabama,
"Was not the case the same in effect as if the statute had made it a criminal act to leave the service without just cause and without liquidating the debt? To say that he has been found guilty of an intent to injure or defraud his employer, and not merely for breaking his contract and not paying his debt, is a distinction without a difference to Bailey. Consider the situation of the accused under this statutory presumption. If, at the outset, nothing took place but the making of the contract and the receipt of the money, he could show nothing else. If there was no legal justification for his leaving his employment, he could show none. If he had not paid the debt, there was nothing to be said as to that. The law of the state did not permit him to testify that he did not intend to injure or defraud. Unless he were fortunate enough to be able to command evidence of circumstances affirmatively showing good faith, he was helpless. He stood stripped by the statute of the presumption of innocence and exposed to conviction for fraud upon evidence only of breach of contract and failure to pay."
In application of the foregoing to the statute, tested by organic law, it is noted that a prima facie presumption created by the Legislature in practical effect might prove conclusive or irresistible, and strip a defendant, by reason of such statute, "of the presumption of innocence" (Bailey v. Alabama,
In Holmes v. State,
"That a legislative presumption of one fact from evidence of another may not constitute a denial of due process of law or a denial of the equal protection of the law; it is only essential that there shall be some rational connection between the fact proved and the ultimate fact presumed, and that the inference of one fact from proof of another shall not be so unreasonable as to be a purely arbitrary mandate. So, also, it must not, under guise of regulating the presentation of evidence, operate to preclude the party from the right to present his defense to the main fact thus presumed. If a legislative provision not unreasonable in itself, prescribing a rule of evidence, in either criminal or civil cases, does not shut out from the party affected a reasonable opportunity to submit to the jury in his defense all of the facts bearing upon the issue, there is no ground for holding that due process of law has been denied him." — Mobile, J. K. C. R. R. Co. v. Turnipseed,
What, then, is the last expression of the legislative will in this state on the subject for decision? Acts 1915, p. 319, is included in the Code of 1923 as sections 4159, 4160, and Acts 1921, p. 47, is not adverted to by the recess code committee of the Legislature. Thus the legislative expression of the public policy of the state is that the rule of evidence contained in Acts 1915, p. 319, shall prevail. That rule is in accord with the foregoing federal decisions. It is:
"That upon the trial of any person charged with violating this act, the defendant shall be a competent witness to testify to his circumstances and intent when he drew the check or draft." Acts 1915, p. 319, § 2; Code 1923, § 4160.
Acts 1921, p. 47, in the use of the words "which is not paid by the drawee," and "where the same is not refunded or restored * * * on written demand," convinces us that the purpose of this law was to furnish an adequate remedy for the collection, by means of a threat of prosecution, of a worthless check, and was not enacted for the purpose of punishing a violator of a law against frauds. Stated in other words, no other reasonable construction can be placed upon the statute when, by its express terms, no obtaining of moneys with a fraudulent intent can exist until there is a failure of the drawee to pay, or, after failure of payment, a written notice of dishonor is given the drawer by mailing to his "last known address," and thereafter the drawer fails to make payment of such sum before the expiration of the seven days' notice provided.
It seems to us that the decisions of Carr v. State,
All the Justices concur.
Addendum
Distinguished counsel urges that a question of jurisdiction is for decision. Under the codification of the acts of 1911 defining the jurisdiction and powers of the Court of Appeals (Acts 1911, pp. 95, 449, codified as sections 7310, 7322), it is urged, the Court of Appeals having certified the question of the constitutionality of a statute, thereupon it should have required the transcript and all papers in said cause to be transmitted to this court, and that all proceedings thereafter be in this court "as if said cause had been appealed originally to said Supreme Court."
To a full understanding of the question before us it should be noted that the former statute "to establish the Court of Appeals," among other things, provided:
"* * * That if the validity of a statute of this state or of the United States is involved said Court of Appeals shall so certify and thereupon the transcript and all papers in said cause, with such certificate shall be transmitted to the Supreme Court and all proceedings conducted thereafter as if said cause had been appealed originally to said Supreme Court: Provided, further, that if the judges of said court are unable to reach a unanimous conclusion, or decision, in any case or matter before them, any one of said judges may certify to the Supreme Court any question or questions of law as to which said judges differ, stating such questions as abstract propositions, and the Supreme Court shall give its opinion upon the question so certified, and the opinions thus given by the Supreme Court shall be given the same effect by said Court of Appeals as it is required to give to the decisions of said Supreme Court." Acts 1911, p. 96.
The latter act had for its purpose the regulation of appeals and the construction of the validity of statutes by the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals, and it contained the provision:
"That before the Court of Appeals should strike down any statute, federal or state, not previously nullified by the Supreme Court, the question involving the validity of same must be submitted to the Supreme Court for determination, the result shall be transmitted to the Court of Appeals, which said court shall be controlled in its decision by the determination *356 of the Supreme Court: Provided, however, that when a statute has been assailed upon constitutional grounds, in the Court of Appeals, and is upheld by said court, the aggrieved party may review the ruling of the Court of Appeals in this particular, by a writ of error to the Supreme Court, unless the question was previously submitted to the Supreme Court by the Court of Appeals." Acts 1911, p. 449.
Thus the last act was a modification of the first in respect to the question, not of jurisdiction to declare a statute, state or federal, unconstitutional, but of the procedure to judgment after the constitutionality vel non of the statute has been declared by this court; that is to say, the acts before us, in legal effect, have been treated by this court and the Court of Appeals, in the due procedure of many causes, to the ascertainment of the constitutionality vel non of a statute necessary to a decision of a pending cause within the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals, where the attack on the statute had not theretofore been settled by this court. The construction, by way of implication, by this court of certifications by the Court of Appeals, of the constitutionality vel non of many important statutes, and the replies thereto transmitted to the Court of Appeals, and thereafter the procedure to judgments in the latter court in accordance with our decision in the premises, was before the adoption of the Code of 1923.
For this due procedure to judgment in the Court of Appeals there is authority. Banks v. State,
We may add to the original opinion that we entertained no doubt of the constitutionality of the act of 1915, codified as sections 4159, 4160, of the Code of 1923, providing punishment for fraud or misrepresentations which amount to false pretense in the matter indicated, and this was and may be done within the provisions of state and federal Constitutions.
This response will be certified to the Court of Appeals.
Application overruled.
All the Justices concur.