132 Ala. 26 | Ala. | 1901
— The indictment alleges that when the warrants were presented to the Ft. Payne Bank, and paid by it they severally had the names of the respective payees indorsed on the back thereof. The name of the payee in one of the warrants is “Jno. Chape-lear.” On the warrant offered and received in evidence the name endorsed is not Jno. Chapolear, hut “Jno. Cha-pelas.” The names are neither the same nor of the same sound. There was a variance, therefore, between the allegation of the indictment and’ said evidence. The court erred in receiving this warrant and the indorsement upon it in support of the averment. There appears now on this warrant also the following: “Jno. Ohape-lear by S. B. Slone.” Sloan, as appears by the avtr-ments of the indictment and the evidence, was the cashier of the Ft. Payne Bank and as such cashed all the warrants on the assurance — alleged to 'be false — of the person presenting, them that the payetp had indorsed them. So that it is clear that the indorsement “Jno. Chapolear by S. B. Slone” was not on the warrant when presented and paid, and is not the indorsement averred in the indictment.
It is alleged in the indictment that one of the Avar-rants presented to the bank was payable to “Sallie Battles” or order. One of those received in evidence is payable to “Sallie Battels.” The difference in the spelling here is immaterial as the names as thus differently spelled are idem sonans. But the indictment further .awers that when this Avarrant was presented to and paid by the bank it had the name of the payee indorsed thereon. On this Avarrant as offered in evidence, and received against defendant’s objection Avere the follow
The. defendant .was arrested a week or ten days after the alleged offense by the commission of which he is alleged to haye gotten eighty-two and 66-100 dollars from the,bank. Against defendant’s objection the State was allowed to.prove by the sheriff who made the arrest that at the.time of the arrest the defendant had forty or forty-five dollar's on his person, The officer further testified that .defendant then said “he had got part of the money for a bale of cotton he had sold and the 'balance for waiting, on .the grand jury.” The defendant. himself testified, that lie had..sold a bale of cotton shortly before his arrest, and there was proof that he had been bailiff .of the grand jury which had sat j nst before his arrest and had been paid for his services, in that capacity. .There was no identification at all of the money in defendant’s .possession when he was arrested as the money paid by the bank on the warrants, nor was there any evidence going in any degree to show that defendant had not legitimately come by this money, as there were no sources from which he might lawfully have acquired it, but, as we have seen, there was evidence in no way disputed that 'he had received the money from the sale of property and from the county for services to the grand.jury. For aught that appears, indeed, he may have been a man of large means. So that the bald proposition involved in the admission in evidence of the testimony of the sheriff that defendant had money when arrested is that the defendant was the man who got the money from the bank on the warrants for that for-, sooth he bad some money in bis pockets a week or ten days after somebody bad so gotten the money from the
The rulings of the court not above referred to or not covered by what we have said are free from error.
Reversed and remanded.