175 A. 340 | Md. | 1934
After an acquittal in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, on a charge of violation of the statute, Code, art. 11, sec. 58, similar to that considered by this court in the opinion reported in
There are twenty counts in the indictment, each charging that the defendant, an officer of the company, a banking corporation, in violation of the law, signed or assented to false public statements of the company's business; and these twenty counts may be grouped into four classes. Five of them charge that the defendant fraudulently signed or assented to the statements with a view to enhancing the market value of the stock and corporate obligations of the bank, all as stated in section 170 of article 27; a second five make the same charge with specification of items falsely stated; a third five charge that the fraudulent signing or assent was for the ulterior purpose of procuring a transfer and assignment of property of another trust company when the defendant knew that the Central Trust Company could not pay in full for it; and a fourth five are the same as the third except that specifications of false items are added. Some of the counts charge that the statements were signed, some that they were assented to, and some of the latter specify the manner of assenting; but no question has arisen from this distinction.
In argument the appellee assumes that the statements referred to were those condensed from reports of items on the books of the corporation, made to the bank commissioner and published in compliance with the provisions of the Code, art. 11, secs. 56 to 58, and the fact that the counts specifying the false items charged contain what are headed, "Condensed Statements," lends color to that assumption, but the source of the figures is not so alleged in the indictment, and is not now before the court. *526
The counts are framed exactly in the language of the statute, but in sustaining the demurrer the trial court concluded that this was one of the instances in which the words of the statute did not suffice for an indictment. 1 Wharton, CriminalProcedure (10th Ed.) secs. 269, 270; State v. Lassotovitch,
The word "fraudulently," in the statute and in the indictment, was in the view of the trial court susceptible of two meanings, and lacking in the certainty and definiteness requisite in an indictment. Specification of the character of the fraudulent action was considered to be required.
In this court the defendant, appellee, presents further grounds of attack urged in the trial court, which should be considered first. The constitutionality of the statute is questioned because its title on enactment in 1878 failed to meet the requirements of section 29 of article 3 of the Constitution. But the statute has been embodied in all of the codes since its original enactment, and the Code of 1888 was a new enactment, sufficient in itself, and without dependence for its validity upon the previous enactment. Reese v. Starner,
The defendant has also questioned the applicability of the particular statute to banking institutions because its provisions never did fittingly apply to statements issued by such institutions, and if they ever did apply, have in that application been superseded by the State Banking Act, Code, art. 11. A bank has no bonds or any other securities of the description of "`obligations," on the market. But it is conceivable that in some situations, and for some purposes, officers and agents of a bank or trust company might find an advantage in manipulating the market values of its stock, and be guilty of the misdemeanor here defined, and this court therefore, agreeing with the trial court, finds it not permissible to restrict the scope of the statute as contended.
A subsequent statute taking over the regulation by law of a given subject, and intended as the complete regulation of it, must have the effect of withdrawing that subject from the application of a former statute, by implication if not by express repeal to that extent. The Public Service Commission Law, Code, art. 23, secs. 346 to 418, superseded previous statutes on the licensing of ferries in counties. Bay Ridge Ferry Corp. v. QueenAnne's County,
A contention that, in so far as the indictment is meant to charge fraudulent promotion of the sale or disposition of the company's stock, it could not be based on section 170 of article 27 because the prevention of such frauds has been taken over by the general "Blue Sky Law," Acts 1920, ch. 552, Code, art. 32A, sections 11 to 14, is not upheld, because no repugnant sections are found in the Blue Sky Law, and the general regulation seems not inconsistent with continuation of section 170 of article 27 in force to the extent of its provisions. If under particular circumstances the two sections should conflict, or apply to the same fraudulent effort, the later section might supersede the former.
There are very few exceptions to the rule that the words of a statute creating and defining a crime are sufficient for a charge of committing it. 1 Wharton, Criminal *529 Procedure (10th Ed.) secs. 269, 270. That found by the trial court in this case was an exception due to a lack in the words of an element essential to criminality, the knowledge of falsity in the representations put out. In indictments for the closely similar crime of obtaining money or property by false pretenses, which in its modern extended scope is mainly statutory, it is usual to insert an averment of knowledge that the false pretenses were false. It would often be necessary to a statement of criminality. Code, art. 27, secs. 139-149, and 555; Jules v.State,
The charge is one of fraudulent complicity in an effort to deceive and defraud by signing or assenting to the issue of false statements to accomplish a specific purpose. That seems to the court to imply, of necessity, a knowledge that there were false representations contained in the statements to be used to accomplish the fraud. The conscious purpose to deceive with falsehood, in other words, would seem to involve actual knowledge of the falsity. Compare 1 Wharton, Criminal Procedure (10th Ed.) sec. 210. If, under circumstances which the court cannot now foresee, guilt of this crime without the actual knowledge of the falsehood should be possible, the court still would be of opinion that the risk of failure to fulfill some of the practical purposes of an indictment from the words as they are would be too small to justify departure from the general rule of acceptance of the statutory words. See Act of Extraordinary Session of 1933, ch. 98. On this point we disagree with the conclusion reached by the trial court, and for that reason find it necessary to reverse the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
Of the decision in State v. Page,
The trial court struck out of the present indictment those counts which were identical with others except that those others specified the false items; and this court concurs in that action.
The court does not find in other contentions advanced by the appellee anything to obviate the necessity of remanding the case for further proceedings. The plea in abatement, a demurrer to which by the State was sustained, averred that the grand jury which returned the indictment was a grand jury selected for a term of court *531 which had expired, and that it had been discharged and then convened for consideration of this case. This was done under the provision in section 23 of article 51 of the Code for recalling a discharged grand jury when, "by reason of any event or events happening before or after said final discharge, any criminal charge shall arise which the said court shall deem of sufficient importance to be investigated forthwith by the grand jury and to be tried by a petit jury." The order of court for the recall did not recite that such a situation existed, and the argument made is that this was a jurisdictional fact which must have been recited. There is no question of jurisdiction of a court of inferior or special jurisdiction. Concurring in this with the trial court, we see no ground for requiring the recital.
The plea of res judicata refers to the acquittal of the defendant on the charge, under section 58 of article 11 of the Code, of accepting a deposit when to his knowledge the institution was insolvent, the charge considered in the opinion in
No other objections to the indictment or to any of its counts have been presented.
Judgment reversed, and case remanded, with costs to theappellant.
ADKINS, J., dissents.