Appellant first contends that his conviction and sentence of forgery and uttering under our habitual criminal . statute [Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 43-2328 — 2330 (Repl. 1964) (Supp. 1969)] should be reversed because that statute violates Article 2, Sections 3 and 8, of the State Constitution. We have previously sustained the statute against attacks on its constitutionality. Ferguson v. State,
We do not agree with this argument. The statute is not couched in language indicative of an intention that its invocation by prosecuting officers be discretionary any more than the statutes fixing punishment for the crimes themselves. The language in' all provide that one convicted “shall” be punished by a term of imprisonment within a prescribed range. See Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 41-1803, 1805, 1810, 1823 (Repl. 1964). Certainly the act as written is invulnerable to attacks for denial of equal protection or for violation of due process. See Graham v. West Virginia,
We know that the statute has been invoked in this state in many instances. See Rowe v. State,
The record does not disclose that the prosecuting attorney, in seeking application of the act in this case, acted arbitrarily, capriciously or wilfully discriminated against appellant or a class of which he was a member. We can only speculate why the circuit judge had no previous experience with the act. No support for appellant’s position is disclosed other than the bare statement by the judge. The most that can be said is that there may have been some laxity in the enforcement of the act. In other jurisdictions laxity in enforcement, even though without apparent excuse, has been held insufficient to render application of such a statute to an individual defendant a denial of equal protection or due process of law, in the absence of any showing of arbitrary or capricious action or of a wilful intention to discriminate. State v. Hicks,
We cannot sustain appellant’s contentions on the record before us. We certainly are unwilling to say that the mere failure of prosecuting attorneys in one district of the state to previously invoke the act, whether because of lack of information of previous convictions in other cases or because of selectivity in enforcement, makes the present or subsequent application of the act a denial of equal protection or due process.
Appellant’s remaining point for reversal is a contention that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction. He says that the state failed to prove that he fraudulently obtained the possession of, or deprived another of, money or property or caused another to be injured in his estate or lawful right by forgery or uttering of a check. This argument is based upon testimony showing that long before the check was presented the person whose name was forged had closed his account in the bank upon which the check was drawn, that the name of the bank had been changed from that appearing on the check, and that one digit of the apparent drawer’s account number was missing. The check was not paid when presented by a person identified as the defendant. Thus, says appellant, he did not deprive either the bank or the person whose name was signed to the check of any money or property or injure anyone in his estate or lawful right. The fallacy in this argument is that the forgery and uttering statutes do not require that the purpose of the forger or utterer be accomplished. The gist of both offenses is guilty intent. They are committed when a check is forged, in the first instance, and offered as genuine, in the second, with the intent to defraud, even though the fraud is not actually perpetrated. Ark. Stat. Ann. §§ 41-1803, 41-1805 (Repl. 1964). Bennett v. State,
The judgment is affirmed.
