The first count of the indictment charged the defendant with having “’Made, forged, altered and counterfeited a certain written instrument purporting to be the act of another,” in the words following: “A. Neiman. Sir: Kindly let the bearer, Mr. B. L. Myer, have anything he may need in Clothing, to the amount of $15.00, and send the bill to me. Lee Richmond,” with the intent to defraud Abe Neiman and divers other persons to the grand jury unknown. The second count charged the defendant with uttering the forged instrument.
To this indictment the defendant demurred on several grounds, only one of which it is necessary for us to notice, to wit, that the facts stated in the indictment did not constitue a crime. This was the ground on which the decision of the County Court proceeded. No opinion was written by the
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Appellate Division. The claim of the respondent is that the facts stated did not constitute a crime because the instrument alleged to be forged was not the subject of forgery, or, at least if it could be the subject of forgery, it could be so only by reason of extrinsic facts, of allegations as to which the indictment is wholly barren. This contention is based on the proposition that the liability purporting to be imposed by the instrument on its maker is not absolute, but contingent upon the drawee or person to whom it is addressed delivering the goods, a fact which is not alleged. That proposition is entirely accurate, and if an instrument which creates a contingent liability only is not the subject of forgery, the demurrer was properly sustained. Nor in that view of the law do I see how any allegation that the order was presented to Neiman and that he parted with property on the faith of it would tend to sustain the indictment as one for forgery. It is the settled law that the crime of forgery is complete when the instrument is made or altered with fraudulent intent, and the utterance of the instrument is not necessary. (2 Russell on Crimes, 318; 2. Wharton’s Am. Crim. L. [6th ed.) sec. 1418; 2 Bishop’s Crim. L. [4th ed.) secs. 560, 563; Commonwealth v. Ladd,
To return to the contention that an instrument creating a contingent liability only is not the subject of forg
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ery, the proposition is certainly a far-reaching one, for it would seem to exclude all letters of credit, liability on which becomes absolute only by the advance of money on the faith of the instrument. But a substantially unbroken line of authorities shows that such is not the law. In Rex v. Ward (2 Ld. Raymond, 1461) nearly all the earlier cases on the subject of forgery are cited and analyzed, and it is there stated that in Savage’s case (Style, 12) a person was indicted for forging letters of credit. Of the Ward case, Mr. Chitty (3 Crim. L. p. 1022) says that it was there held that forgery at common law might be committed in respect to any writing whatever by which another might be defrauded, and that “ A distinction, at the same time, was marked out between forgery and fraud; that the last must- actually take effect, while the -. first was complete, though no one was actually injured, if the tendency and intent to defraud were manifest.” Mr. Greenleaf says (Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 3, sec. 103) it “May be committed-of any writing which, if genuine, would operate as the foundation of another man’s liability.” Mr. Wharton says (2 Am. Crim. Law (6th ed.) sec. 1419); “ The instrument must be such, when forged, that it
does or may
tend to prejudice the rights of another, though actual injury need not be proved.” Mr. Bishop says (1 Crim. L. sec. 572) : “It is the false making or matei’ially altering, with intent to defraud, of any writing which, if genuine, might apparently be of legal efficacy, or the foundation of a legal liability.” In Maine it was held that the false making of an instrument which might operate as a letter of credit was forgery at common law. (Ames Case, 2 Greenleaf, 365.) Orders for the delivery of goods on the responsibility of the alleged maker have been held the subject of forgery in all the states where the question has arisen so far as my research goes. (Commonwealth v. Fisher,
We now come to the legislation and decisions of tins state. By chapter 54 of the Laws of 1801, reproduced in the Revised Laws (L. 1813, ch. 44, p. 404), it was enacted that the forgery of many instruments enumerated, including “ any warrant or order, for payment of money or delivery of goods, whether such order purports to be the order of the owner of the goods or money specified therein, or of some person who claims any interest in the same, or of any other person with intention to defraud any <, person or body politic or corporate whatever,” should constitute a felony. Under that statute a person was indicted for forging this order: “ Mr. Seward. Sir, Let the bearer trade thirteen dollars, twenty-five cents, and you will much oblige yours, etc. August 16, 1809. Samuel Layton.” It was held that this was an order for the delivery of goods and a conviction of the defendant for forgery was sustained. (People v. Shaw,
The law of 1813 was superseded by the Revised Statutes of 1830 which enacted (2 R. S. p. 673, sec. 33) : “ Every person who, with intent to injure or defraud, shall falsely make, alter, forge, or counterfeit * * * Any instrument or writing, being, or purporting to be, the act of another, by which any pecuniary demand or obligation shall be, or shall purport to be, created, increased, discharged or diminished, *508 or by which any rights or property whatever, shall be, or purport to be, transferred, conveyed, discharged, diminished or in any manner affected, the punishment of which is not herein before prescribed: By which false making, forging, altering or counterfeiting, any person may be affected, bound,, or in any way injured in his person or property, upon conviction thereof, shall be adjudged guilty of forgery in the third degree.” This provision of the Revised Statutes was almost literally re-eriacted (the variation in phraseology being trivial and not altering the effect of the statute except that the offense was made forgery in the second degree) in section 511 of the Penal Code, and now appears as section 887 of the Penal Law. The revisers in their notes stated that the Revised Laws contained an enumeration of a great number of instruments specifically described as the subject of forgery, which had given rise to many questions as to what cases fall within its terms, and that “ To avoid cavil, to reach every case of forgery that has ever been committed, or that can ever be committed, and to afford a definite and distinct rule, the preceding section has been prepared.” (5 Edmunds Stat. at Large, p. 546.) If the • expectations of the revisers were justified, and it is difficult to conceive of language more comprehensive, the instrument in the present case was the subject of forgery, for in addition to the request to deliver the goods found in the order in People v. Shaw (supra), it contains a promise on the part of the maker to pay for the same.
After the enactment of the Revised Statutes the- question again arose whether a particular instrument was the subject of forgery. In People v. Stearns (
Several cases are cited by the learned counsel for the respondent to support his position. On examination they appear not to be in point. In People v. Farrington (
The principal reliance, however, in support of the ruling below is the decision of this court in People v. Drayton (
The order of the Appellate Division and that of the County Court should be reversed and the demurrer to the indictment overruled.
Gray, Haight, Werner, Chase and Collin, JJ., concur;. Vann, J., concurs in result.
Order reversed, etc.
