Ivan Rodriquez appeals his convictions for two counts of forging a public document and two counts of uttering a forged public document. 1 Rodriquez argues the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions because, although he gave his brother’s name to a police officer who was issuing traffic *670 summonses to him, he signed his own name on the summonses and he did not falsely make or materially alter any writing. Accordingly, he contends he neither forged a signature nor made a false document. We disagree and affirm his convictions.
BACKGROUND
The facts, which were not in dispute, were presented to the trial court by way of proffer. Sergeant Heflin initiated a traffic stop for a vehicle being driven by Rodriquez because the registration plate on the vehicle was expired. After the stop the officer determined Rodriquez did not have an operator’s license in his possession. In providing the officer with the information necessary to issue summonses, Rodriquez verbally provided Heflin with his brother’s identifying information and Heflin, using that information, prepared and issued two traffic summonses in Rodriquez’s brother’s name, Osvaldo Rodriquez. Heflin handed the summonses to Rodriquez, and Rodriquez signed them, using his own name, and not that of his brother Osvaldo. In doing so, Rodriquez did and intended to sign his own name on the summonses. The trial judge found, however, that the signature of “Ivan Rodriquez” on the summonses was illegible.
ANALYSIS
Rodriquez argues that by signing his own name to the summonses, he did not possess the requisite intent to defraud required to prove forgery, that he did not commit forgery by signing a false name, and he did not make a false public document. “ ‘The judgment of a trial court sitting without a jury is entitled to the same weight as a jury verdict and will not be set aside unless it appears from the evidence that the judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.’ ”
Blake v. Commonwealth,
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Code § 18.2-68, which proscribes the offense of forgery, provides in pertinent part: “If any person forge a public record ... or utter, or attempt to employ as true, such forged record ... knowing the same to be forged, he shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony.” “Forgery is a common law crime in Virginia. It is defined as ‘the false making or materially altering with intent to defraud, of any writing which, if genuine, might apparently be of legal efficacy, or the foundation of legal liability.’ ”
Fitzgerald v. Commonwealth,
The summonses issued to Rodriquez by Heflin were public records.
See Reid v. Commonwealth,
Rodriquez argues he did not falsely make a writing because Heflin prepared and wrote the information on the summonses. “No definition of forgery can be comprehensive enough to include all the crimes that may be committed by simple use of pen, paper and ink.”
Muhammad v. Commonwealth,
In
Campbell v. Commonwealth,
Furthermore, “[sjigning one’s own name with the intent that the writing be received as written by another person, or impersonating another in the signature of an instrument, or signing in such a way as to make the writing purport to be that of another, are all acts of forgery.”
United States v. Price,
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At common law, to constitute a forgery, there must be a false making with the intent to defraud. As to whether the evidence was sufficient to prove the element that Rodriquez had the specific intent to make or cause to be made a false public record, “ ‘[i]ntent is a state of mind that may be proved by an accused’s acts or by his statements and that may be shown by circumstantial evidence.’ ”
Wilson v. Commonwealth,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Rodriquez also pled guilty to one count of unlawfully using identification documents of another to avoid arrest and driving on a suspended operator’s license. He does not appeal those convictions.
. During oral argument and relying upon a Maryland case, defense counsel argued that "telling a lie does not constitute forgery merely because the lie is reduced to writing.” In
Maryland v. Reese,
. Rodriquez makes no separate argument and cites no separate authority with respect to the two convictions of uttering a forged public document. He merely contends that because the summonses were not forged, he cannot be guilty of uttering a forged document. Since Rodriquez did forge the summonses, he also uttered them by knowingly allowing the officer to rely upon them in order to avoid further prosecution. Accordingly, Rodriquez’s two uttering convictions are affirmed.
