79 P. 398 | Idaho | 1905
This ease was before this court at its November, 1903, term, and was remanded for a new trial. (9 Idaho, 582, 75 Pac. 258.) On a retrial the defendant was convicted of presenting a false and fraudulent claim for $237 as a bounty on one hundred and fifty-eight coyote scalps, which scalps were found to be spurious or manufactured. The prosecution was under the provisions of section 6385 of the Revised Statutes, which section is as follows: “Every person who, with intent to defraud, presents for allowance or for payment to any state board or officer, or to any county, town, city, ward or village board or officer, authorized to allow or pay the same if genuine, any false or fraudulent claim, bill, account, voucher or writing is guilty of a felony.” An act was passed at the sixth legislative session entitled “An act providing for the killing of coyotes, lynx and wildcats,” and providing' a fund for the payment of the same (Sess. Laws 1901, p. 205), by which act a bounty of $1.50 was offered for each and every coyote killed, and the defendant is charged with the crime of felony committed as follows: “That said R. D. R. Adams, on or about the thirteenth day of June,
The first question presented by the brief of counsel for appellant is the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. The evidence shows that the defendant appeared before his brother in law, who was justice of the peace, on the twelfth day of June, 1902, with a box claimed to contain the ears of one hundred and fifty-eight coyotes, and defendant’s written claim against the county for the sum of $237 was prepared by said justice of the peace, and subscribed and sworn to by the defendant. The justice then gave to him said bill or claim and the box of ears and told him to send them to the clerk of the court of Fremont county. The defendant then left with the box and bill, and some person presented a box to the postmaster at Market Lake and requested him to register the same as coming from J. W. Ayers, Market Lake, to A. M. Carter, St. Anthony, the said Carter being clerk of the court of said Fremont county. It also appears that said bill and a box of ears were received by said Carter as clerk of said court and ex-officio auditor, at St. Anthony, on the thirteenth day of June, 1902; that he received said bill in a letter that he received which showed that it was from Adams and in his favor, for bounty on one hundred and fifty-eight coyotes. It further shows that said ears were manufactured and spurious. It is further shown that a man by name of Short and the defendant were operating together in the coyote business, and that said Short manufactured coyote
It is contended that the only proof against the defendant is that he made the affidavit of the claim under the bounty law on June 12, 1902, at Market Lake, and that there is not a word showing or tending to show that he, directly or indirectly, in person or by mail, presented or caused to be presented, or participated in presenting, such claim to any board or officer whatever. That contention is not sustained by the evidence, as the evidence shows that the defendant appeared before a justice of the peace and requested the justice to prepare a claim for him for bounty on one hundred and fifty-eight coyotes, and also at the same time produced a cigar-box containing one hundred and fifty-eight scalps or ears. The justice thereupon prepared the claim and affidavit, and the defendant then and there signed and swore to the claim, and the claim with the box of ears was returned to the defendant by said justice and the justice thereupon told him to send them to the clerk of the court in Fremont
In the case before us, the end in view, to wit, the presenting of the claim, was attained. The means adopted involved several steps, all of which were established by direct proof, except that it was not proven who presented the box of ears to the postmaster in order to have it registered and sent to the clerk of the board and mailed the letter to the clerk of the court. However, the admissions of the defendant to the deputy sheriff as above set forth shows beyond a reasonable doubt that he was instrumental in having said claim presented for allowance with intent to defraud the county. It is urged that the ears admitted in evidence were spurious; that the fraud was detected by the county commissioners, and that the bill was not allowed and was never paid, and for that reason the defendant is not guilty. It is not requisite under the provisions of section 6385 that the
It is contended under the provisions of section 1760b, Revised Statutes, that the county commissioners were not authorized to allow claims against the bounty fund unless such claims were accompanied with the scalps of the animals, and as only the ears and not the scalps accompanied this claim, the defendant was not guilty for that reason. The provisions of that section are no longer applicable in case of claims and demands for bounty on the wild animals enumerated and designated in an act of March 11, 1901, entitled “An act providing for a bounty for the killing of coyotes, lynx and wildcats, and providing a fund for the payment of the same.” (See Sess. Laws 1901, p. 205.) The provisions of section 1760b have been superseded by the provisions of sections 2 and 3 of the act above cited.
It is contended that it was not contemplated or intended by "the legislature in the enactment of the law approved March 11, 1901, supra, that false and fraudulent claims against the scalp fund were crimes under the provisions of section 6385, for the
We find no errors in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.