7 Johns. 201 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1810
Lord Kenyon said that the case of the King v. Wheatley (2 Burr. 1125.) established the true boundary between frauds that were, and those that were not indictable at common law. That case required such a fraud as would affect the public; such a decep? tion that cpmmpn prudence and care were not sufficient to guard against it, as the using of false weights and measures, or false tokens, or where there was a conspiracy to cheat. Thus, in the case of Jones, (1 Salk. 379.) who obtained money of A., pretending to have a command from B., whereas B. did not send him; but as he came tvith no false token, it was held not to be indictable. The offence was nothing more than telling a lie. So in the case of The King v. Lara, (6 Term Rep. 565.) the defendant got possession of certain lottery tickets, the property of A., pretending that he wanted to purchase thein, and he delivered to A. a fictitious order on a
In the present case xve search in vain for the false to ken. There xvas nothing beyond the defendant’s false assertion that he xvas ready to pay the judgment. There xvas not even the production of either note or money; and common prudence xvould have dictated the withholding of the receipt until the money xvas paid and the note drawn. To support this indictment xvould be to overset established principles.
The judgment must, therefore, be arrested.
Judgment arrested..