47 S.E.2d 139 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1948
1. An indictment for cheating and swindling by obtaining money through false representations, which fails to allege the ownership of the money thus obtained, is subject to a demurrer because of this omission.
2. The venue for a prosecution for cheating and swindling is the county where the advance is made.
3. Where representations are made by the defendant to the prosecutor in Wilcox County, the prosecutor mails a check from Evans County to another in Ben Hill County, and the check is delivered to and cashed by the defendant in Irwin County, the venue for a prosecution for cheating and swindling is in Irwin County.
4. The specific charge requested was legal and adjusted to a distinct matter at issue, would have materially aided the jury, and should have been given as requested although in principle and in more general and abstract terms the charge may have been covered by other instructions given by the court.
To the indictment the defendant filed a demurrer on six special grounds. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendant excepted pendente lite.
The case proceeded to trial, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. The defendant filed a motion for new trial based on the general and nineteen special grounds. This motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted. 1. In ground one of his demurrer the defendant contends that the indictment is defective in that it fails to allege ownership of the funds and money paid the defendant by the prosecutor, the person alleged to have been defrauded.
It seems to us that the unquestioned rule in a case of cheating and swindling is that an indictment charging the defendant with obtaining money or other property by means of false pretenses must correctly state the ownership in some person of such money or other property alleged to have been so obtained.
In O'Neal v. State,
In Green v. State,
In the instant case, it is necessary for the State to allege in the indictment the ownership in some person of the money alleged to have been so obtained, and ground one of the defendant's demurrer is "that said indictment fails to allege ownership of the funds and money as to which it is alleged the prosecutor, H. Ross Rogers, was injured and damaged and which was alleged to have been paid by the prosecutor, H. Ross Rogers." Code § 26-7410 under which the defendant was indicted is: "Any person using any deceitful means or artful practice other than those mentioned in this Code by which an individual . . is defrauded and cheated shall be punished as for a misdemeanor." InScott v. State,
In Guyton v. State,
The words used in the instant case to allege ownership are that H. Ross Rogers "did pay him, the defendant, therefor [the property in question] the sum of $1925," and that the said H. Ross Rogers had been injured and damaged in the sum of $1925; thus the language in the present case is not in the language of the Code, that H. Ross Rogers had been "cheated and defrauded" of a stated sum of money, but that he had been injured and damaged in a stated sum of money. Without being cheated and defrauded, Rogers could have been injured and damaged as a result of the payment by him to the accused of the $1925 of some other person's money. Here the demurrer raised the objection that the indictment did not definitely put the defendant on sufficient notice as to whether he was charged with obtaining the money of H. Ross Rogers or that of someone else. Rogers might have paid him the money of someone else, and on account of some legal relationship or arrangement might have been forced to repay such third party and have been injured and damaged in such an amount, as was the case in O'Neal v. State, supra, where the money was paid by one person and yet the ownership was in another. See, in this connection, Rex v. Douglass, 1 Camp. 212 (170 English Reports, Full Reprint, 933). We do not think that the indictment as against the demurrer sufficiently alleges the ownership of the funds and money as to which the prosecutor, H. Ross Rogers, was alleged to have been injured and damaged, and which was alleged to have been paid by him to the accused. Therefore, we think that the demurrer to the indictment should have been sustained. We have considered the other grounds of the demurrer and find none of them meritorious.
2. In special grounds ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, seventeen, and nineteen of the defendant's amended motion for new trial, he contends that the evidence fails to disclose the proper venue.
The evidence discloses that the representations were made to the prosecutor by the defendant in Wilcox County; the prosecutor mailed a check from Evans County to O. H. Thomas in Ben Hill County; Thomas received the check and then delivered it to the defendant in Irwin County, where the defendant cashed the check.
In Kemp v. State,
In Dyas v. State,
We are of the opinion that the offense alleged in the indictment was consummated when the defendant received and cashed the check in Irwin County; therefore the venue for the prosecution is in Irwin County and not in Wilcox County. The trial judge erred in overruling these special grounds of the defendant's amended motion for new trial. See, in this connection, 43 A.L.R. 545, 547.
3. The indictment here is based upon Code § 26-7410. An indictment based upon this section must allege: (a) that representations were made; (b) that the representations related to existing fact or a present event; (c) knowledge of the falsity of said representations; (d) that the representations alleged to have been made were made with intent to deceive and defraud; and (e) that they did deceive and defraud. Goddard v. State,
The defendant in writing requested the court to charge: "The State must prove that such representations were made by defendant knowing that they were false, and that they were made with the design of defrauding the prosecutor, H. Ross Rogers." The intent to defraud is the gist of the offense. Moore v. State,
We think that the specific charge requested was legal and adjusted to a distinct matter at issue, would have materially aided the jury, and should have been given as requested, although in principle and in more general and abstract terms the charge may have been covered by other instructions given by the court.Davis v. State,
4. The other special grounds of the motion for new trial as amended are not meritorious. The case being returned for a new trial, the general grounds of the motion will not be considered.
Judgment reversed. Gardner and Townsend, JJ., concur.