49 Mo. 542 | Mo. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a prosecution against the defendants for obtaining money from one Owen McDermott, the prosecutor, by false pretenses. The indictment is substantially as follows, to-wit: “That Edward Evers and John Evers, late of St. Louis, in the county of St. Louis aforesaid, on the fifteenth day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy-one, at St. Louis, in the county of St. Louis aforesaid, with intent to cheat and defraud one Owen McDermott, unlawfully, knowingly, designedly and feloniously did falsely pretend to said McDermott that neither of them, the said Edward Evers and John Evers, had any partnership or business connection with one
The indictment then proceeds to allege that by means of said false pretenses the two Evers obtained from McDermott $589.
This indictment and prosecution were under section 47 of the third article of chapter 42, concerning crimes and punishments. (Wagn. Stat. 461.) The defendants were tried and convicted,, and moved in arrest of judgment; and this motion being overruled, they have brought the case here by appeal. Some questions-arose upon the trial in regard tothe evidence an dins tractions, but in' the view I take of thé case it is unnecessary to notice them here. •
1. 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.. (Whart. Am. Crim. Law, §§ 2087, 2116, 2118, 2121-2, and the-authorities there referred to; see also Commonwealth v. Strain, 10 Metc. 521; State v. Green, 7 Wis. 676; Rex v. Goodal, Brit., Cro. Cas., Russell & R., 461.)
Many of - the alleged pretenses in this indictment refer.' to-future events, and some seem to be promises or guarantees that certain things will be done. „ In regard to such promises, our Supreme Court held in the case of The State v. Chunn, 19 Mo. 283, that they were not within this statute. -That was a case where the prisoner falsely pretended that he was the owner of a slave, and induced the prosecutor to buy the slave and take a bill of sale with covenant of warranty of title. The court held that this warranty took the case out of the statute.
2. The indictment ought to allege all the facts constituting •the offense. In this case the material fact that the prosecutor believed the alleged pretenses to be true, and, confiding therein and by reason thereof, parted with his money, is wholly omitted. The indictment is therefore bad, and the motion in arrest should, have been sustained.
The judgment must be reversed.