122 Mich. 562 | Mich. | 1900
The information in this case charges, in substance, that the respondent was on June 7, 1897, a justice of the peace of the township of Springwells, and a member of the township board; that Christian D. Roeser was supervisor, and Charles Warn eke was clerk; that on the date aforesaid, at a meeting of the board, there were before the board certain bills of certain claimants for work upon the highways of district No. 1 of said township, of which said district the said Luttermoser was a resident; that on said date, and at the place of said meeting, said Luttermoser took the order book of the clerk of the township, containing stubs and corresponding blank orders used for the payment of claims out of the highway funds of said township and district, and tiie said several bills of claimants, and then and there pretended and assumed to write out orders for the payment of the money of the several claimants in district No. 1 as shown by the bills before him, ready for the signatures of the clerk and supervisor, and to properly make out the several stubs connected therewith; that said Luttermoser correctly wrote the amount of the bill of Aug. Tabert (order No. 167), in the stub thereof, for the sum of $3.75, which said sum of $3.75 was the entire amount then and there due to said Tabert from the township of Springwells, but falsely, deceitfully, and fraudulently wrote in the order itself the sum of $13.75. The information avers like facts and acts of respondent as to three other orders, and alleges that the respondent did designedly and fraudulently cause these orders to be signed by the supervisor and clerk. The orders are set out, and are payable to the respective
“And that thereafter the said Otto L. Luttermoser indorsed his name upon the back of each and every of said orders, and fraudulently presented the same to the treasurer of the township of Springwells, and received the money, according to the face of said several orders above set forth, out of the funds of said township; that the bill of Aug. Tabert, John Kunkel, Sam Gove, and Aug. Pries, then in the hands of Otto L. Luttermoser at the time he wrote the orders and stubs above set forth, was in' each case for the amount of three and 75-100 dollars, which sum in fact was actually owing to the said several parties, and which the said Otto L. Luttermoser then and there well knew; that the said Otto L. Luttermoser, by assuming and pretending to correctly copy the amounts of said several bills of claimants into the said several orders in payment therefor, induced the board to believe that the correct amount was written in the body of the orders, and knowingly, falsely, and fraudulently induced the said supervisor and clerk to sign and countersign the said orders, and by means of said false pretenses aforesaid the said Luttermoser did thereafter obtain the money represented by the said several orders from the treasurer of the said township of Springwells, out of the funds of said township, with the intent to cheat and defraud the said township of Springwells. And the said Christian D. Roeser, supervisor, and the said Charles Warncke, clerk, relying upon and believing the fact to be that the said Luttermoser had written in the body of said orders "the same amount as shown by the several bills, respectively, and being induced so to do by the false and fraudulent pretenses and representations of the said Luttermoser aforesaid, were deceived thereby, and respectively signed and countersigned the said orders; and the said Otto L. Luttermoser, by reason of the false pretenses as aforesaid, did designedly obtain possession of the said orders, and thereafter the money represented by and according to the face of said several orders, from the treasurer of the said township of Springwells, out of the funds of the said township, with the intent to cheat and defraud the said township of Springwells.”
The information further proceeds to negative the truth that the township was indebted to the various parties in
1. It is contended that the information is fatally defective for the reason that no natural connection is shown between the false pretenses and the obtaining of the money. The fact that the respondent made use of these orders to obtain the money of the township to the amount represented by the orders, from the township treasurer, is averred. We think this makes the connection. It shows that in fact the orders were used as instrumentalities to obtain money fraudulently, and with intent to cheat and defraud the township.
2. It is next urged that the information is bad for duplicity, in that it charges two offenses, — the one, obtaining the signatures of the clerk and supervisor to a written instrument by false pretenses, under section 11575, 3 Comp. Laws 1897; and the other, obtaining the money of the township by false pretenses, an offense punishable under the same statute. The nature of the offense makes it necessary to set out the nature of the false tokens and pretenses. The obtaining of the signatures and the presentation of the orders constituted the false pretenses to the treasurer which induced him to part with the money of the township. Possibly the facts were set out in greater detail than was absolutely necessary, but this was not a fault. The gist of the offense was the obtaining the money by the presentation of false or invalid orders. When this is stated, it answers the further objection that the information is bad for duplicity because in the same count several distinct, petty offenses are alleged, as these supposed distinct offenses consist of obtaining these several orders, but the averment as to obtaining the money is single.
3. It is, contended that the evidence shows that the false pretenses were not relied upon. It is sufficient to say that we do not read the testimony as by any means conclusively showing any such thing. On the contrary, there is enough in the very circumstances of the case to justify the inference which the jury drew.
“In other words, if you should find that Mr. Warncke and Mr. Roeser knew of the invalidity of those orders, if you should find them invalid,— knew what Mr. Luttermoser had done in that regard, — then, under those circumstances, obviously there could be no conviction, because they would not have been moved by what he did. But all I meant to say in that regard was this: That because they say they did not necessarily rely upon what he had done, but made an examination, or something of an examination, for themselves, or at least one of them, or relied upon somebody else having checked them over, still I say that if you find with reference to this matter that, after all, the real cause of this matter was the fraud of Mr. Luttermoser, then, and under those circumstances, I should say it was the moving cause, and the false pre tenses in that regard, so far as the issuance of the orders, had been established.”
This instruction is assigned as error. We think it fully justified. Under this instruction, before the jury could find the respondent guilty, they must have found that the orders falsely representing an amount greater than the sums due the respective claimants would not have been issued except for the wrongful act of the respondent, and hence that the instrumentalities which enabled him to obtain the money from the township treasurer would have had no existence. We repeat, the gist of the offense was obtaining the money.
5. It is contended that, in order to warrant a conviction, there must be some active, direct pretense. The presentation of the orders, known to be fraudulent, and procured as these were, was a pretense. 1 McClain, Cr. Law, § 674. See, also, Com. v. Mulrey, 170 Mass. 103.
The conviction will be affirmed, and the case remanded.