85 S.E. 7 | N.C. | 1915
The defendant was charged in the court below with obtaining money under false pretenses, upon the following indictment:
The jurors for the State, upon their oaths, present: That S. A. Gibson, late of the county of Rockingham, wickedly and feloniously devising and intending to cheat and defraud William S. Martin, on the 23d day of October, A.D. 1912, with force and arms at and in the county aforesaid, unlawfully, knowingly, designedly, and feloniously did unto William S. Martin falsely pretend that Thomas Knight, T. H. Barker, and A. F. Tuttle had consented to become sureties for said S. A. Gibson on a note for the sum of $350, and that he, said S. A. Gibson, had to get another on the note with said Thomas Knight, T. H. Barker, and A. F. Tuttle, and that their signatures would be secured on said note before its transfer or disposal. Whereas, in truth and in fact, said Thomas Knight, T. H. Barker, and A. F. Tuttle had not consented to become sureties for said S. A. Gibson on a note for $350. By means of which said false pretense he, the said S. A. Gibson, knowingly, designedly, and feloniously did then and there unlawfully obtain from the said William S. Martin the following goods and things of value, the property of William S. Martin, towit, $350, with intent then and there to defraud, against the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State.
S. P. GRAVES, Solicitor.
W. S. Martin, the prosecutor, testified: "At the time of the alleged offense I lived in the town of Leaksville, Rockingham County, and was *382 engaged in the livery business. The defendant came to me at my office and asked me to go on his note with T. H. Barker, Thomas Knight, and Dr. Tuttle, for the sum of $350; that he, S. A. Gibson, had seen Barker, Knight, and Tuttle, and that they had agreed to sign the note with me. I told Gibson to get the other men to sign it and I would sign it. Gibson said he wanted to use the note that evening, and that if I would sign it then, he would go immediately and get the signatures of the others. I knew, T. H. Barker, Thomas Knight, and Dr. Tuttle; they were residents of the same town, and I knew of their solvency. The note was to run three months, being dated 23 October, 1912. I would not sign the note alone, and relied upon the statement made to me by the defendant, that the three parties named had promised to become sureties or indorsers thereon. Upon these representations made to me by the defendant, I signed the note and never knew but that they were sureties thereon until I was notified by the Bank of Leaksville, in which the note had been discounted, of its maturity, and a demand was made upon me for payment thereof, when I discovered (320) that my name alone appeared as surety, none of the others, Barker, Knight, nor Tuttle, having signed it. I took up the note upon demand of the bank, by the renewal thereof in my own name, and became solely responsible for its payment." There was evidence by three witnesses, A. F. Tuttle, Thomas Knight, and F. T. Barker, that they had not promised or agreed to sign the note as sureties, and no one of them had promised to sign it as surety. There was also further evidence as to how the note was taken up in the bank by the prosecutor.
The defendant moved for a nonsuit under the statute (Public Laws 1913, ch. 73) because the State had failed to make out a case against the defendant upon all the evidence. The motion was overruled, and defendant excepted. There was a verdict of guilty. Defendant moved in arrest of judgment. Motion overruled. Judgment on the verdict, and defendant appealed.
After stating the case: It is an elementary rule in the criminal law that a defendant must be convicted, if at all, of the particular offense alleged in the bill of indictment. He has the constitutional right to be informed of the accusation against him, "by indictment, presentment, or impeachment," and no person shall be convicted of any crime but by the unanimous verdict of a jury upon the charge so *383
made. Const., Art. I, secs. 11, 12, and 13. The evidence, therefore, must correspond with the charge and sustain it, at least in substance, before there can be a conviction. The defendant contends that the evidence in this case does not so correspond with the charge, and does not, in law, support it, but that there is a fatal variance between the two. If this be so, the verdict was wrong and cannot stand. He is charged in the bill with obtaining money, towit, $350, by a false pretense, while the proof tends to show only that, while he made the false representation knowingly and corruptly, he did not obtain money by reason thereof, but was induced to part with the note, which he signed for the defendant, and which he afterwards "took up" with another note signed also by himself, and that he was never paid any money on the note, and certainly none to the defendant. All the defendant got was a note signed by the prosecutor; how it was done and to whom payable does not appear. The defendant never got any money from the prosecutor. What he did get, we presume, was paid by the bank to him. There was a fatal variance between the allegation in the bill and the proof. It is the general rule that the thing obtained by the false pretense, as in the case of the thing stolen in larceny, must be described with reasonable certainty, and by the name or term usually employed to describe it. McLain's Cr. Law, sec. 595; S. v. Reese,
The judge should have sustained the motion and dismissed the indictment; but this will not prevent a conviction upon another indictment for obtaining the note by a false pretense, and this follows from what we have said. A party is indictable under Revisal, sec. 3433, for obtaining a signature to any written instrument, the false making of which would be punishable as forgery. The evidence offered at the trial proved an indictable offense, but not the one alleged in the bill. We presume the solicitor will send a bill with averments agreeing with the proof he can make, and the court may hold the defendant to answer another indictment.
The judgment is reversed, the verdict set aside, and the bill of (323) indictment dismissed as of nonsuit.
Reversed.
Cited: S. c.,