124 Cal. 32 | Cal. | 1899
Defendant appeals from a judgment upon a verdict convicting him of forgery, and from a refusal of a new trial. Defendant was employed as clerk by G. J. Griffith, and is prosecuted for forging his employer’s name to a .check on the First National Bank of Los Angeles for two hundred dollars, with intent to defraud Griffith and the bank. <■
It was proved that defendant presented the check to the bank; and obtained the money thereon, and Griffith testified that he, the witness, did not draw the check and had not authorized defendant to do so; and, further, that the money drawn was not used by him, Griffith, or for his benefit. On the other hand, Grove, the bank teller who paid the check, and Mr. Hammond, the assistant cashier of the bank, both testified that in their opin.ion the check was genuine.
There being, then, a conflict as to whether the check was gen-mine or not, the prosecution introduced a number of checks, drawn in the name of Griffith on the same bank, which he swore were forgeries, and had been paid, to his damage in the sum of .ábput twelve hundred and fifty dollars. There was no evidence -•..whatever tending to connect Bird with these forgeries—if they were such. A suspicion may have been suggested that as Bird ¡¡had drawn the money upon one check, alleged to have been ¡forged,. he probably was guilty of the other forgeries, and had "been systematically committing such forgeries. As he was the confidential clerk of the prosecuting witness, suspicion would more naturally attach to him.
f If proof had been forthcoming to show the connection of defendant with these other checks which were said to have been forged, still such coincidence is not admissible to prove the corpus delicti, but only after that has been established to show guilty intent. And the prosecution assumed the same burden of proof as to each of the checks introduced to show guilty knowledge as in regard to the check for which he is being tried. (People v. Whiteman, 114 Cal. 338.)
'• As to some of these checks Griffith testified that he believed the signature to.be Bird’s signature—meaning, perhaps, that he believed that Bird signed his, the witness’, name. He does- not say that he knew Bird’s handwriting, or why he believed that Bird wrote it. Indeed, there is much to show that his opinion
Griffith was allowed to testify that he had been handed a blank check to which his name appeared to have been signed, which blank he immediately tore up and threw into the waste basket. Upon objection being made, the district attorney stated that he would follow it by testimony showing where it was found. This occurrence was long after defendant had been arrested, and it was not proposed to show that Griffith’s name had been signed to the blank by Bird, or that Bird had ever seen it, otherwise than by showing where it was found. Afterward one Hoyle was sworn and testified, under objection, that he examined the contents of a square-top desk “said” to be the desk occupied by Bird, and found among them the blank check in question. When he found it, or in whose custody the desk had been, or whether others occupied it as well as Bird—if it can be assumed that Bird did occupy it—was not shown. There was no other testimony connecting Bird with the blank, or with the desk. The evidence was clearly incompetent.
There are some other alleged errors, but of less consequence than those already alluded to, and which do not call for extended notice. I think it was a matter within the discretion of the court whether Griffith should have been required to point out upon the enlarged photographs the difference between the signatures alleged to have been forged and those admitted to be genuine. The court also properly excluded evidence as to what Hammond said to Griffith as to one of the checks, but I think that Gibson should have been permitted to state the grounds of an opinion to which he had testified, and am unable to appreciate the objection that it was argumentative; also that the defense should have been permitted to prove that Griffith—the prosecuting witness—had endeavored to persuade one of the sureties "on defendant’s bail bond to withdraw. The fact that it already .appeared that Griffith was hostile did not supply the place of the proffered testimony. If true, such evidence would tend to establish a persecuting spirit, and a degree of hostility which, in the opinion of the jury, might affect the value of his evidence.
Henshaw, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.