200 Mo. 29 | Mo. | 1906
On' June 23, 1905', the grand jury of Buchanan county returned an indictment against the defendant, charging him with forgery in the third degree, to-wit, the unlawfully making and forging a certain lease and' chattel mortgage and assignment, purporting to be an act of one J. Herety, to the Union Mercantile Company, with intent to defraud, etc.
The defendant was arrested and duly arraigned and entered his plea of not guilty, and was tried and convicted at the September term, 1905, of the criminal court of Buchanan county. In due time he filed his motion for a new trial, which was taken up, heard and overruled, and thereupon he filed a motion in arrest of judgment, which was also overruled, and the defendant sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of two years in accordance with the verdict of the jury. Leave was given the defendant to- file a bill of exceptions during the next term of the criminal court of said county, but he did not avail himself of that privilege, and hence this appeal presents nothing for review by this court except the record proper. The defendant is not represented in this court by counsel, but in obedience to the statute we have examined the record proper.
There is perhaps no- proposition in criminal law
Blackstone defines forgery to be “the fraudulent making or alteration of a writing to the prejudice of another man’s right.”
In 13 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 1082, it is said: “ Forgery is the false making, or alteration with fraudulent intent, of any writing, by which the party committing the act may wrong-fully obtain something of value to the prejudice of another’s rights because of the apparent legal efficacy of the writing and its capacity to deceive.” This court, in State v. Warren, 109 Mo. 430, ruled that the intent to defraud is an essential element of the crime, and must be averred and proved. Both at common law and in the highest courts of the several States of the Union, it has uniformly been held that in order to be the subject of forgery, the instrument upon its face must, if it were genuine, be of some apparent legal efficacy for injury to another, and if on its face it is utterly valueless and of no binding force or effect for any purpose of harm, liability or injury to anyone, it cannot'be the subject of forgery. [Colson v. Com., 110 Ky. 233; King v. State, 43 Fla. l. c. 218, 219; 19 Cyc. Law and Proc., 1379, and cases cited in note 94.] In People v. Tomlinson, 35 Cal. 503, it was said by the court: “The purpose of the statute against forgeries is tO' protect society against fabrication, falsification, and the uttering, publishing, and
Without further elaborating the defects and insufficiency of this instrument, it is sufficient to say that if it had been genuine, it would have had no legal efficacy whatever, and would have bound no person to have paid any rent in any definite sum or at any definite time whatever, and, as a chattel mortgage, would have amounted to no more than a blank piece of paper. As the indictment sets forth the alleged instrument in its very words without any averment showing in the most remote manner how it could have been made to act injuriously or fraudulently by reason of matter aliunde, it must be held that it charges no offense against the laws of this State, because the instrument alleged to have been forged was and is of no legal validity, and as this appears upon the face of the record proper, it must be held that the indictment is insufficient to support the judgment and sentence of the court and the verdict of the jury, and the judgment is therefore reversed and the prisoner discharged.