46 N.Y.S. 497 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The indictment charged the defendant and one Parodi with having, on the loth of December, 1894, at the city óf New York, feloniously obtained from one Giallorenzo thirty ■ dollars by means of false and fraudulent representations, to wit: That a corporation, called “ Maryland Progressive Improvement Company,” of which the defendant was president, had' been organized under- the laws of Maryland¡that the corporation. owned 40,000 acres of land on the shores-of-Chesapeake bay and Patuxent river, county of St, Marys, '. Maryland; that the Capital stock of said corporation had been paid up to the amount of $1,000,000; that the corporation was solvent, had completed plans for the building of a city on the lands, required the services of a large number of laborers in order to begin the work of building the city, and' that the defendants were authorized by the corporation to hire such laborers. One Alfenito.accompanied the complainant as interpreter when he went to talk with the defendant about December 15, -1894, in Mott; street,. New York, the defendant speaking. English- and the complainant Jtalian. The complainant was a banker and the People claimed that he was told by the defendant' substantially what was charged in the indictment, and also that every one who bought one share of the stock for three dollars would get five years’ work .guaranteed .him, and that the complainant . could buy as many shares as- he wanted, .and defendant would give : him a commission on the sales. Complainant said he wanted to send some of his friends to work on the company’s lands, and bought ten shares of stock, for which he paid defendant thirty dollars. •
There was dispute as to whether these statements were made, but there was no serious claim that the statements, if made, were true. All the questions of fact in' the- case were submitted to and determined by the jury, and the evidence was. sufficient to support such-determination. The defendant was clearly guilty of the offense charged against him, and the only questions calling fof considera- • .tion here are those arising upon exceptions taken by the defendant during the trial. ' The Code of ■ Criminal Procedure (§ 542) requires
One question raised by the defendant is, that the court erred in permitting the People to show by the complaint that pursuant to instructions by the defendant he, the complainant, told other Italians that the corporation was very solid, was incorporated, and owned 40,000 acres of land in Maryland, and that $4,000,000 had been paid upon it. After the purchase by the complainant from the defendan t of the ten shares of stock and the payment of the $30,'the defendant employed the complainant as agent to sell shares to other Italians, and, pursuant to this employment, complainant did sell 300 shares of the stock, and it was to the Italians to whom he sold these shares that he made these statements sworn to. The court admitted the evi7 dence as bearing upon the question of fraudulent intent, the transaction being of a similar nature to the transaction of the sale by defendant to complainant of the ten shares charged in the indictment. It seems to us that this evidence was properly admitted under the rule laid down in Mayer v. People (80 N. Y. 376), “that when the representations, their falsity and the knowledge of the accused that they were false is established by competent testimony, the allegation that they were made with intent to defraud may be supported by proof of dealings of the accused with parties other than the complainant, which tend to show a fraudulent scheme to obtain property by devices similar to those practiced upon him, provided the dealings are sufficiently connected in point of time and character to authorize an inference that the purchase from the complainant was made in pursuance of the same general' purpose.” This rule of evidence is applied in civil actions where the like issue is involved and the rules of evidence in civil and criminal cases are ordinarily the same. (Code Grim. Proc. § 392.) All these transactions were about the same time, and the admission of this evidence was, therefore, proper.
Another question raised by the defendant' is that the court erred in refusing to admit in evidence a prospectus issued by the defend
Another question raised.by the defendant is that the- court efred in the exclusion of the evidence of the witness Yenne as to the conversation between the complainant and the defendant, wherein Parodi acted as interpreter. .The complainant spoke only Italian, the defendant only English ; the interpreter spoke both languages ; the witness, could only understand English. The conversation was about the middle of January, 1895. The" defendant desired to prove that the interpreter then introduced the defendant and the' com
We have examined the other questions raised in the course of the trial with reference to the rejection and admission of evidence, but do not deem it necessary to refer to them in detail.
It is also contended by the defendant that there were errors committed by the court in its charge to the jury and in response to requests made. We have carefully examined the charge itself and the responses of the court to the requests. We are of the opinion that the charge was entirely fair and impartial and a very clear statement of the principles of law applicable to the case, and that no errors were committed in. the body of the charge, or in response to
Our conclusion is that the judgment should be affirmed.
Rumsey, Patterson and Parker, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, J., concurred in result.'
judgment affirmed.