127 Ga. 278 | Ga. | 1907
1. The indictment is not, for any reason assigned, subject to a,ny of the grounds of special demurrer. See, in this connection, Sims v. State, 110 Ga. 290(2), and cit.; Timmons v. State, 80 Ga. 216(1); Lascelles v. State, 90 Ga. 347; McGarr v. State, 75 Ga. 159; Sutton v. State, 124 Ga. 815. Nor was the indictment subject to general demurrer for any reason assigned.
2. To allow an agent of a non-resident business firm to testify that the firm keeps a record of the names of all employees, and that he has examined the record, and the name of a certain individual does not appear thereon, is proper evidence for the purpose of showing that such person is not an employee of the firm, and such evidence would not be inadmissible on the ground that the record itself is the highest and best evidence. Hines v. Johnson, 95 Ga. 629, 644; Daniel v. Braswell, 113 Ga. 373.
3. The fact that the judge, when stating in his charge to the jury the contentions of the defendant, failed to add that if the contentions were true, the defendant should be acquitted, was no error, where in another portion of the charge the jury were properly instructed as to the circumstances under which the defendant should be found not guilty. See, in this connection, Joiner v. State, 105 Ga. 646(3).
4. Knowingly passing as genuine a forged instrument is conclusive of the intent to defraud. 13 Am. & E. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 1104; Bradner on Evid. (2d ed.) 667. See, also, Hagar v. State, 71 Ga. 167. Consequently a charge in the following words: “If it is a-forged paper and the defendant knew it and indorsed it and passed it with this knowledge, there is sufficient evidence of his intent to defraud,” is not erroneous on the ground that the intention is a matter for the jury.
5. Evidence showing that the defendant indorsed a forged draft made payable to his order was sufficient to authorize charges to the effect that the defendant would be guilty if he knowingly and fraudulently passed a forged check, or was in possession of such check with the intention fraudulently to pass the same. Timmons v. State, 80 Ga. 216(2).
6. Though the defendant be indicted in different counts for the three grades of forgery set forth in §§ 233, 239, and 240 of the Penal Code, namely, the making, the uttering, and the possessing of the forged instrument, yet a failure of the judge to give in charge to the jury, so far as applicable, § 233, defining the offense of forgery proper, affords no ground of complaint to the defendant, when the judge does give in charge §§ 239 and 240, defining the other two grades of the offense, and confines the consideration of the defendant’s guilt by the jury to those latter two sections, there being no evidence to authorize a conviction under the count for forgery.'
7. The evidence amply supports the verdict, and no sufficient reason appears for reversing the judgment of the court below.
Judgment affirmed.