114 Cal. 437 | Cal. | 1896
Defendant was accused by information of the crime of obtaining property by false pre
We think the demurrer was properly sustained. Looking at the history of the offense, and the evil which-it has always been designed to correct, and regarding as we must the contemporary construction given to-statutes of like purpose and effect, both in England and the United States, we are satisfied that the provision of the code was not designed to include an instance of defrauding another of real estate, and, consequently, that-the information did not charge an offense thereunder.
The language of the code defining the offense is: “ Every person who knowingly and designedly by false or fraudulent representation or pretenses defrauds' any, other person of money or property, or who causes or procures others to report falsely of his wealth or mercantile character, and by thus imposing upon any person obtains credit, and thereby fraudulently gets into-possession of money or property, is punishable in the same manner and to the same extent as for larceny of the money or property so obtained.”
Similar provisions,- varying slightly in verbiage, but having a common purpose, are to be found in the statutes of every state of the union, so far as our investigation extends, and like their English .prototypes, the earliest of which is 30 George II, chapter 24, section 1, are the outgrowth and expansion of the old offense of “cheats” or “cheating” as it existed at the early common law proper, and later under the statute of 33 Henry VIII, sections 1, 2, “which,” as suggested by Mr. Bishop, “is common law with us.” These later statutes have been enacted, Mr. Bishop tells us, “to-supply defects in the earlier law, which as trade increased was plainly seen not to go far enough in the-
In their origin both the common law and statutory offenses were undoubtedly designed and aimed solely at protecting personal property, and in aid of the laws against larceny and theft. Indeed, they appear to have sprung into being largely by reason of certain defects, in the application of the laws against larceny. Among; the reasons stated in the statute (33 Henry VIII) for-enlarging the offense of cheating are that “many light and evil-disposed persons, not minding to get their living by truth, etc., but compassing and devising daily how they may' unlawfully obtain and get into their hands and possession goods, chattels, and jewels of other persons for the maintenance of their unthrifty living; and also knowing that if they came to any of the same goods, chattels, and jewels by stealth, then they, being thereof lawfully convicted, etc., shall die therefore— have now of late falsely and deceitfully- contrived, devised, and imagined privy tokens and counterfeit letters in
Our American statutes upon the subject have all followed more or less closely those of England. As indicated, there are slight differences in language, but in substantive purpose and effect they are the same. Some, instead of employing the specific terminology of the English statutes in designating the character of the property made the subject of the offense, have used
The Indiana case above cited takes the widest departure from the original scope of the offense that has come under our observation. In no case, so far as an extended research discloses, has the offense ever been held to include transactions in land or real estate. In fact, but two instances are cited in which this claim has heretofore been made, and in both it was overruled. The first was in State v. Burrows, 11 Ired. 477, where it
The other instance arose in Commonwealth v. Woodrun, 4 Pa. L. J., 362, where, discussing the sufficiency of an indictment for cheating in a real estate transaction, it is said: “There is another objection to this bill of indictment, which to my mind is equally fatal. The subject matter of the charge laid in it is land and title to it. Does not the same reason apply against making real estate the subject of a criminal charge for depriv
“In both cases it is the mobility of the article obtained which makes the transaction a public evil, as it enables the offender to remove or conceal the property from its owner, with himself, from public justice. And it strikes me as nugatory to prepare a penalty for obtaining property which the offender cannot pass if obtained by fraud, and which he cannot remove from its actual location.
“In all legislation against obtaining property by false tokens or cheats the obtaining real estate thereby, I believe, has never been made the subject of criminal charge and punishment.”
Speaking of this offense, in Wharton’s Criminal Law, at section 1195, it is said: “As will be hereafter seen, under the statutes, as first drafted, only larcenous property is protected. By the statutes now existing in most jurisdictions this limit is obliterated, and the obtaining by false pretenses both of land and of written securities is made indictable.” But to the point that land is now the subject of the offense, the single authority cited, is State v. Burrows, above cited and quoted ' from, which, as will be noted, holds directly to the contrary. Later on, at section 1204, the same work again adverts to the subject in this wise: “As we have seen, property not larcenous was not at first covered by the statutes, and hence the words ‘money,’ ‘goods,’ ‘property,’ have been held not to include .... ‘land.’” Here, curiously enough, to support this suggestion is again cited the same case of State v. Burrows, supra. It .will be thus observed that this case is cited as supporting directly opposite views of the same question—an infirmity under which that case can in no manner be said to rest, and the implied suggestion of which was no doubt the result of mistake or inadvertence on the part of the eminent writer or his reviser. In this immediate connection, however, it is further said: “It is, otherwise, however, by special statutes in most jurisdictions.” In view of what precedes it, this language is, we think, ambiguous and
•[As suggested in State v. Burrows, supra, the very language of our statute furnishes us a key to its intended limitation, in providing that the offense shall be i<punishable in the same manner and to the same extent as for larceny of the money or property so received.” Since real estate is not the subject of larceny, this language would be meaningless in attempting to apply it to the facts alleged in the information^
The judgment is affirmed.
Haroutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.