Murphy v. State

118 Ala. 137 | Ala. | 1897

HARALSON, J.

It is not disputed by counsel for defendant that the paper alleged to have been forged is not within the statutory definition of forgery in the first or second degree, and that if any offense was committed, it is forgery in the third degree, under section 4726 of the Code of 1896. The contention is, that to be forgery under this section, it must be forgery at common law, and that defendant cannot be.found guilty thereof under the evidence. This court has approved as comprehensive and precise the definition of forgery given by Mr. Bishop: “Forgery is the false making, or materially altering, with intent to defraud of any writing which, if genuine, might apparently be of legal efficacy, or the foundation of a legal liability.” — 2 Bish. Cr. Law, § 495. “The principal point of consideration is,” the author observes, “that the instrument must either appear on its face to be, or be in fact, one which, if true, Avould possess some legal Aralidity; or, in other Avords must be legally capable of effecting a fraud.” — Ib. § 503; Rembert v. The State, 53 Ala. 467; Dixon v. The State, 81 Ala. 61.

In this case, as the evidence tends to sIioav, the defendant desired to marry M. V. Askew, a married woman, who told him she Avas already married, and the Avife of Thomas Askew, but that there Avas then pending a suit for divorce betAveen her husband and herself in Lee county, and that as soon as she was divorced from him, she Avould marry him; that he told her he could get a divorce for her in Russell county, in 30 or 40 days, and some time afterwards, the defendant gave her the paper set out in the indictment and bill of exceptions, purporting to be a divorce granted in her favor in Russell county chancery court, and told her it was her divorce, and thereupon she’ married him. It also tended to sIioav that no such case as that *140of M. V. Askew v. Thomas Askew, in which said divorce purported to be granted, existed at any time in said chancery court; that there had been a divorce suit in that court, of John W. Hodge v. Emma Hodge, and that-a decree of divorce had. been rendered in that case, which was partly printed and partly written; that the paper offered in evidence was a copy of the decree in that case, and that the written- parts which are italicized or underlined, were in the handwriting of the, register of said court, except the words “M. V. Askew v. Thomas Askew,” whenever they occur, and the figure 4 in 1894, which words and figure had been changed by some other person than the register; that the names of John W. Hodge and Emma Hodge, as they were originally written and appeared in said paper, had been since partial] y erased and the names of M. Y. Askew and Thomas Askew written in lieu thereof. The evidence also without conflict showed that defendant changed the paper in this respect and in the matter of the year of its date, and that the paper offered in evidence was the paper that 'had been so changed.

It thus appears that the defendant made and uttered the paper alleged to have been forged; that he did it with the intent to deceive and defraud said M. V. Askew, and that he did deceive and defraud her thereby into contracting marriage with him, while she was yet the wife of another man. Moreover, it needs no argument to show that the paper was such, as if it had been genuine, appeared to be of legal efficacy. On its face it was as complete a decree of divorce of said M. V. Askew from her husband, as could well have been written, and purported to have been duly signed by the chancellor of the district. There was no error, therefore, in admitting said paper in evidence, and in refusing the general charge for the defendant.

When the register ¡had testified to the original copy of the divorce that had been granted in the case of Hodge v. Hodge, and the alteration of the same, as above stated, the solicitor asked him: “When it was written John W. Hodge v. Emma Hodge, what did the paper purport to be?” and he answered: “It purported to be a copy of the decree in the case.” To this *141question the defendant objected, as being illegal and irrelevant, and calling for the opinion of the witness. This was the statement, at most, by the witness, of a collective fact on which the defendant could have crossed him, if he desired.

Nor was there error in allowing the witness, M. Y. Askew, to ansAver the question, “Under what circumstances did he'(the- defendant) bring the paper to you?” She ansAvered, “It was to divorce me.” She had already detailed the facts of the marriage she Avas induced by his fraud to enter into Avith defendant; that he left her, Avhen she declined to marry him on the ground that she had a living husband, stating that he could procure for her in 30 or 40 days in Bussell county a divorce from her husband; and that he returned, afteiuvards, Avith the document purporting to be a legal diATorce. It Avas competent, therefore, for the State to ask, and for her to ansAver, the question propounded to her. It Avas not calling for his uncommunicated intentions, but for his declared purpose and intention.

It appears the marriage took place in the Fall of 1894. M. V. Askew testified that she and defendant lived together thereafter as husband and wife, about eleven months, and she Avas advised by lawyers that they could not live longer together without subjecting themselves to prosecution and she 'thereafter separated from defendant and SAvore out a Avarrant against him; that he immediately left, and she did not know where he was for two years, when he was arrested and brought up for trial. The Avarrant SAyorn out was for forgery, and bears date, the 31st January, 1896, and Avas executed April 1st, 1898.

The defendant offered tAvo letters purporting to have been written by said M. V. AskeAV to defendant, each dated October 10, 1895, in which she addressed him as her husband, and in one of which she tells him of what the laAvyers had advised about .their living together before a divorce Avas procured from her husband, and that thereafter they should marry again. In the other she tells him that his letter to her — to use her own expression — put her to her “trumps;” that he had said he would get that divorce, when he saw further, and she thought he had seen far enough; that if he desired *142to live with her, he could get up the money by the last of the week, and start the matter, and told him not to come over any more, but get the money to start the divorce suit. It is manifest she was referring to the divorce between her and her husband. When these letters were offered, the witness was asked if she wrote them, and an objection to the proof, raised by the State, was sustained. The purpose for which these letters were offered is not .disclosed in the transcript. Counsel for defendant in their brief say: “The State had previously offered some evidence by the same witness tending to show that defendant had run away, and that not even the witness, his supposed wife, was cognizant of his whereabouts. The purpose of the letters was to show that she did know his whereabouts; and it was further to show, or to tend to show, by expressions therein contained, that he had not deceived her by the alleged forgery.” It may be replied, that these letters indicate that they were written about the time said witness was notified by her counsel that her marriage with defendant was illegal, and that she and he would be prosecuted if they continued to live together, — for, in one of them, she so states to him, and tells him not to return; that his absence at this time was not an escape for fear of prosecution but that he ran away after this, and it was afer that time, that the witness states she had not known for two years, and until he was arrested, where he was. She swore out the warrant against him, on January 31, 1896, and he was not arrested until April 1, 1898. It thus appears, she may not have been guilty of any contradictory statement. W. F. Conner testified, that he was the father of M. Y. Askew; that as soon as the warrant was issued, — which was, as we have seen, in January, 1896, more than three months after said letters were written on the 10th of October, 1895, — defendant left the community, and witness did not know where he had gone. He also testified, that defendant admitted to him that he had changed the copy of the decree in the case of Hodge v. Hodge, so as to make it appear to be a decree of divorce in Askew v. Askew, and that the paper so changed was the one offered in evidence. The evidence of this witness is uowhere contradicted. The witness, M. Y. Askew, as *143lias been seen, testified fully to the deceit and fraud the defendant had practiced on her by means of this paper, and thereby induced her to enter into said illegal marriage with him. Waiving any further consideration of the supposed error in the exclusion of this evidence, ive are satisfied if any error occurred, no injury resulted therefrom to the defendant. — Code of 1896, § 4333.

A ffirmed.

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