182 Mo. 58 | Mo. | 1904
This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction for obtaining property upon false pretenses.
Defendant was indicted and convicted of the crime of obtaining property under false pretenses. The indictment charges that he contrived, designed and intended to cheat and defraud the Peoples House Furnishing Company, a corporation, of its goods, wares and merchandise by means of false pretenses. The false pretenses used by the defendant in the perpetration of the offense are set out in the indictment in this way: “Did apply to and request the said Peoples House Furnishing Company, its officers, agents and servants to sell him a certain lot of furniture and merchandise, herein
The principal witnesses upon whom the State must rely to maintain this conviction, was Mr. Sharp, the salesman for the furniture company, and Gustave A. Debus-, to whom the pretenses and representations were made, and by whom the goods were sold to the defendant. Their testimony fully supports the charge in the indict
After Mr. Sharp sold the defendant the goods and received ten dollars as part payment, the bookkeeper prepared the note and chattel mortgage to secure its payment. The bookkeeper states that the note and mortgage were signed by the defendant as Geo. Yeager. It will suffice to say that the testimony by the .State tended 'to make out the case as charged in the indictment.
On the part of the defendant, there was testimony tending to prove good reputation for honesty and integrity; and the defendant, who testified in his own-behalf, denied the testimony as given by Sharp and the bookkeeper of the company, and he further testified that the furniture was not purchased for himself, but for a man by the name of Yeager. Other witnesses were introduced, whose testimony tended to corroborate the testimony of the defendant as to the goods being bought for Yeager.
The court instructed the jury, and after submission -of the cause, the jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury in the above entitled cause, find the defendant guilty of obtaining property by means of false pretenses as charged in the indictment, and .assess the punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years. Jacob M. Stuber, Foreman.”
We will further discuss the testimony and instructions of the court, during the course of the opinion.
Ail examination of the record before us in this cause discloses two vital propositions for our consideration :
First. Was the testimony sufficient to authorize a conviction?
Second. Is the verdict as rendered sufficient to support the judgment upon it?
At the very threshold of the investigation of the questions involved in this cause, we are confronted with the well-settled legal proposition that it is an essential ingredient of the offense charged in this indictment that the party charged to have been defrauded should have believed the false representations to be true. This logically must be true, for unless the pretenses and representations were believed to be true, and at least partially induced the action of the party to whom they were made, then the obtaining of the property would not be the result of the false pretenses and representations.
This court, in State v. Evers, 49 Mo. l. c. 545, clearly announced the rule. It was,thus stated in that case: ‘ ‘ The essence of the crime of obtaining money or property by false pretenses is that the false pretense should be of a past event, or of a fact having a present existence, and not of something to happen in. the future, and that the prosecutor believed that the pretense was true; and that, confiding in the truth of the pretense and by reason thereof, he parted with his money or property. ’ ’
It was held in State v. Green, 7 Wis. 676, that in order to sustain a conviction for obtaining goods by false pretenses, it must be averred in the indictment and proved on the trial that the party defrauded was induced to part with his property in consequence of such representations.
The rule as announced by this court, and the other cases herein referred to, find support in Wharton’s Crim
We have carefully read in detail the testimony of both Sharp and the bookkeeper who consummated this sale of the goods to the defendant, and while it must be frankly admitted the testimony is not as satisfactory to our minds as it should be, and doubtless could have been made so by propounding a few additional questions to the witnesses; still the jury were the triers of the facts and we have reached the conclusion there is sufficient evidence to support their finding upon this essential element of the offense.
The testimony of Sharp, at the very outset of the negotiations for this sale, indicates that he made a condition precedent to the sale of the goods; that is, that defendant must satisfy him that he was all right. Mr. Sharp stated in his testimony: “I told him of course we were selling goods on credit and if he could show us that he was a working man and would pay his debts and was all right we would be glad to sell him the bills on the terms he wanted. I went through and showed him a few goods that he wanted to look at and the bill amounted to $91.50.”
The bookkeeper emphasizes the conclusion of the jury upon this element of the offense. He testifies that .after having selected the goods, the defendant told him his name was George Yeager. This witness, the bookkeeper, whose name was Gustave A. Debus, upon cross-examination by counsel for defendant as to the inducement in making the sale, said:
“Q. Notwithstanding Mr. Sharp had it written out you were careful to ask him his name? A. Yes, sir; I do that in all cases.
“ Q. He satisfied you in regard to your willingness to selling that furniture? A. Yes, sir; on that reputation we sold him the goods.
“Q. Yon proceeded to make out the papers then, did yon? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. He signed the note? A. Yes, sir; and the mortgage, too.”
It is clear from a careful analysis of all the testimony that the agents of the furnishing company believed the representations of defendant to be true, and the inference is irresistible that their reliance upon them induced the sale and delivery of the property.
Upon the second proposition, as to the contention urged that the verdict is insufficient because it fails to state the value of the goods obtained by the false pretenses, the charge in the indictment and the evidence before the jury must be taken into consideration with the form of the verdict. The verdict was: “We, the jury in the above entitled cause, find the defendant guilty of obtaining property by means of false pretenses as charged in the indictment, and assess the punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years.”
The indictment charged the goods to have been of the value of $91.50. All the evidence shows that the goods were of that value and that valuation, moreover, was fixed by contract, and there is absolutely not the slightest evidence that they were'of less value than thirty dollars. The value of the goods as charged in the indictment was not a controverted question in the trial of the cause; about that, there was no dispute. There was no necessity of the jury incorporating the value of the goods in their verdict. We know of no legal rule which required them to do so. They were directed by the instructions of the court to assess the punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary, if they found the goods
The uniform expressions of all the courts is that the verdict of a jury is not to be tested by the technical rules of construction which are applicable to pleadings; but should be liberally construed in view of the issues tried, and all reasonable presumptions are indulged to sustain the verdict and that the jury has found all the facts necessary to support it.' [22 Ency. Pl. and Pr., 959 and 960, notes 2 and 3, and cases cited; State v. Craige, 89 N. C. 475; Honeycut v. Angel, 4 Dev. & Bat. (N. C.) 306.]
Under the evidence in this cause, there being no dispute as to the value of the goods, while a general verdict, finding the defendant guilty in manner and form as charged in the indictment (the indictment charging the value of the property), would have been more ap
Appellant complains that there was no proof of delivery of the goods. There is no merit in this contention ; the testimony on the part of the State shows that he bought the goods upon the representations made, and requested their delivery to a certain address and that he knew of that transfer to the place where he told the officers the goods could he found.
The action of the court in.overruling the objections of appellant to the testimony of witness Henry Hercker was clearly correct. He simply detailed what was done in the way of delivering the goods, and that was a part of the transaction, and the fact that the defendant stated to the officers afterwards where the goods were located, indicates clearly that he was fully cognizant of the delivery of the goods at the place he indicated in the first instance, and their transfer to the place where they were finally recovered.
The testimony in the case fully warranted the finding of the jury, and the execution of the note and chattel mortgage for the goods constitutes no defense to this prosecution. The execution of these instruments under an assumed name, instead of relieving the defendant, only emphasizes the fraud perpetrated.
The instructions were full, covered every feature of the law to which the facts were applicable, and indeed were very favorable to the defendant.
Finding no reversible error, the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.