30 Mo. 236 | Mo. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was indicted for selling, exchanging and delivering forged counterfeit notes to one George Hawdon for a certain consideration to him paid, which said notes purported to be made and issued by the Chippewa bank, a bank duly incorporated under the laws of the state of "Wisconsin. The defendant was convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary, from which he appealed to this court.
One of the points made by the defendant is, that the judge of the court below summoned one of the jurors. It appears that the juror was upon the panel of jurors detailed for service in the cause. As the juror was regularly on the panel, we do not see how the defendant was affected in a way which injured him by the court’s calling up the juror to be sworn. It does not appear that any irregularity was produced by this act of the judge.
The court ordered the witnesses to be separated during the examination. This order, however, was not obeyed, and
The bank whose notes were forged was not incorporated by a special act creating a corporation, but it seems that it was created under a general banking law providing the mode by which banking companies might be organized for doing business. The twenty-third section of the sixth article of the act concerning practice in criminal cases enacts, that if, on the trial or other proceeding in a criminal cause, the existence, constitution or powers .of any banking company or corporation shall become material or in any way drawn in question, it shall not be necessary to produce a certified copy of the charter or act of incorporation, but the same may be proved by general reputation, of by the printed statute book of the state, government or country by which such corpora
We do not see what the cases from New York have to do with this question. There the constitution requires that acts of incorporation shall be passed by a majority of two-thirds of the legislature. The general banking law of that state was held by one court to be within this provision and
It is objected that there are several offences joined in one count in the indictment; that the defendant is charged with having made a sale of the notes, which is one offence, and is also charged with having exchanged or delivered the notes, which is another offence. The indictment is founded on the ninth section of the fourth article of the act concerning crimes and their punishments, and charges that the defendant feloniously" did sell, exchange, and deliver to one George Hawdon, for a certain consideration to him paid by the said George Hawdon, to-wit, for the sum of six dollars, &c. The section of the act referred to provides that “ every person, who shall sell, exchange or deliver, or offer to sell, exchange or deliver, or receive upon a sale, exchange or delivery, for any consideration, any falsely made, altered, forged or counterfeited note, check, bill, draft, or other instrument,” &c. An offence in an indictment must not be stated in the disjunctive, so as to leave it uncertain what is really intended to be relied on as the accusation. Thus to say that the defendant forged or caused to be forged, that he erected or caused to be erected a nuisance, is not sufficiently positive. (1 Chit. Cr. L. 231.) Where a statute, on which an indictment is founded, enumerates the offences or the intent necessary to constitute such offences disjunctively, the indictment 'must charge them conjunctively where the acts are not re
The defendant excepted to the instruction to the effect, that, though the Chippewa bank never issued genuine bills of the character or denomination of those described in the indictment, yet, if the bills were falsely made bills, they are within the statute. The words falsely made are used in the section on which this indictment is framed. Forgery at common law denotes a false making, which includes every alteration of or addition to a true instrument. (2 East, 852.) It can not be maintained that there can not be a forgery unless there is a previously existing genuine instrument identical with that forged.
We are not prepared to say that the instruction given for the defendant, to the effect that “ to constitute a sale or exchange of the bills described, he must have parted with his entire interest in the subject of each, for a consideration paid,” is correct. If there was a sale of the bills followed by a delivery, we can not see how the matter can be bettered
Judgment affirmed.