249 P. 536 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *375 Appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Imperial County of the crime of forgery with intent to defraud Mrs. J.M. Adair, treasurer of Imperial County, and the county of Imperial.
There were three counts in the indictment, all practically the same. The first count charging forgery of the name of one Roberts, the second the name of one Shubert, and the third the name of one Main. We will first consider the first count, that of forging the name of Roberts. Certain instruments in writing were set forth in this count of the indictment; the first being a demand for $225, against the county of Imperial, for twenty-five days' work for road district number three in the county of Imperial, alleged to have been performed in the month of November, 1924, by Roberts with "one man and Fresno." An affidavit attached to this claim purports to have been signed by Roberts and certified as sworn to before defendant, but without designating his official title. Indorsed upon this claim is an approval of it by the defendant as chairman of the board of supervisors of Imperial County; attested by the clerk of the board, and approved by the county auditor, who thereupon issued a warrant for $225, directed to the county treasurer in favor of said Roberts, upon the back of which was indorsed "Charles Roberts, J. Roy Adams," and the warrant was marked "PAID Dec. 10, 1924, J.M. Adair, County Treasurer."
The second and third counts in the indictment were in the same form excepting as to the amounts stated in the demands and the names of the claimants. The defendant demurred to the indictment on the grounds that no public *376 offense was charged, uncertainty as to what instruments were alleged to have been forged, and other grounds which we will consider in reviewing appellant's argument.
[1] The first point discussed by appellant is that each count in the indictment is "duplicitous," and purports to state three separate and distinct offenses. The contention is that the instruments are wholly separate and distinct instruments — the demand, the warrant, and the indorsements on it. It may be conceded that the indorsements on the warrant were separate and distinct from the warrant, and that a charge of forging the warrant does not include the forging of the indorsements. It is contended that it was impossible to ascertain what instrument defendant was accused of forging. We cannot commend the indictment in this case as an example of good pleading, but we hold that it was sufficient to enable a person of ordinary understanding to know that in the first count the name of Roberts purports to have been signed by Roberts, and that this name was forged; otherwise we should have to come to the absurd conclusion that defendant was charged with having forged his own name, as well the other names which were signed on the demand after the presentation of the demands were approved by defendant as chairman of the board of supervisors, and there could have been no object in forging the other names if the claim was a just demand regularly presented. The defendant is not in the position of a party not acquainted with all the officials whose names are signed to the documents. There was no defect or imperfection in the matter of form which tended to the prejudice of a substantial right of this defendant on the merits. This contention is made more clear by a consideration of the charge that the defendant uttered the forged instrument with the intention to defraud, etc. From the foregoing it is plain that no more than one offense was charged in the first count of the indictment.
[2] It is further contended by appellant that the demand alleged to have been forged did not subject defendant to a prosecution for forgery in that it was not verified. This contention cannot be upheld. The oath imports to have been administered by defendant who appears in the approval of the demand as chairman of the board of supervisors. *377 He certified to it as verified by Roberts and accepted it and approved it as genuine and represented it to the other officers as genuine, and himself indorsed the warrant which was issued upon that demand. For the purposes of this case, the signing of the name of Roberts, whether he was a real or fictitious person, and his appearing to have sworn to it before defendant, and the utterance of the document by defendant in the manner alleged in the indictment, was sufficient to make out a charge of forgery. What we have said with regard to the first count in the indictment applies to the second and third counts.
[3] There was no prejudicial error in admitting in evidence the indorsements on the warrants; they were pertinent to the charge of uttering a false demand with intent to defraud.
[4] The court did not err in sustaining an objection of the prosecution to the introduction of evidence that the demand did not comply with section 2644 of the Political Code. It appears that the claim was not in the form required by law, but the defendant's allowance of the same, knowing the forgery, and the utterance of the same as a valid claim, estopped him from contending that the allegations of the indictment did not constitute forgery, and the irregularity of the making and uttering of the demand does not afford an avenue of escape from the charge in the indictment or the proof of the facts alleged on the trial.
Appellant contends that the court erred in refusing certain of defendant's requested instructions. [5] In charging a jury the court is required to state to them all matters of law necessary for their information. Giving instructions not pertinent to the issues tends to confuse the jury, and the court is required by section
[9] Although we have held that the indictment was sufficient to enable a person of ordinary understanding to know certain things from the indictment, yet we do not mean to hold that the indictment was in all respects certain; in fact, we hold that the indictment was uncertain in that as between the demand and the warrant the indictment does not show which one of those two instruments was forged or in what particular the instrument was forged. If the forgery was of the name of the maker, the forged name in the demand was the name of Roberts (in the first count). But if the forgery of the warrant was the forgery of the name of the maker, it must have been a forgery of the name of the auditor. The demand and the warrant were separate instruments, executed by different persons and at separate times. Therefore, although the demurrer should have been sustained it does not necessarily follow that the judgment should be reversed. The case was tried upon the theory that the alleged forgery consisted in the false and unauthorized use of the names of the makers of the demands, viz., Roberts, Shubert, and *380 Main. The defendant had as good an opportunity to defend against these charges, as he would have had under any other form of indictment, and he availed himself of that opportunity, although not successfully. For this reason the case comes within the provision of the constitution (art. VI, sec. 4 1/2) which is intended to guard against reversal of any judgment on account of errors in pleadings, unless the errors resulted in a miscarriage of justice. We are of the opinion that it did not result in any such miscarriage of justice.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Conrey, P.J., and Houser, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on November 15, 1926.