361 S.W.2d 775 | Mo. | 1962
By an information filed in the Circuit Court of Henry County, defendant was charged with altering a check with intent to defraud by increasing the numerals “$500.00”, therein handwritten in ink as the amount payable, to “$5,000.00”, contrary to the provisions of § 561.011 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. (to which revision all statutory references herein are made). On application of defendant for change of venue, the case was transferred to the Circuit Court of Bates County, where, upon trial, the jury returned a verdict finding him guilty as charged and assessing his punishment at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a term of two years. His motion for new trial was overruled and he was thereupon sentenced to custody of the Department of Corrections for the term designated by the verdict. He has appealed.
Defendant’s brief contains five points. Four of them are predicated upon his contention that the alteration here shown did not constitute a crime. That contention, in substance, runs thus: inasmuch as the only alteration alleged and shown in the evidence was the alteration of the handwritten numerals purporting to set forth the face amount of the check to conform with the purported amount payable, ■ as stamped in the body of the check by the drawer thereof with a check protector, to wit: “Exactly $5000 & 00 Cts.”, such alteration was immaterial. The remaining assignment is that, assuming the information alleged and the evidence supported a finding of defendant’s guilt, yet there was no evidence that the offense was committed in Henry County, Missouri. That contention was specifically set forth in defendant’s motion for an acquittal filed at the close of the evidence and thereafter duly carried forward in his motion for new trial.
Defendant offered no evidence. That adduced in behalf of the State, to the extent here material, supports a finding of the following facts: On the 12th day of May, 1960, defendant and Irving Lee Bush, Sr., met in the offices of S. & J. Sales Co., Inc., in Kansas City, Missouri, to consummate an exchange of real estate. Mr. Bush was a resident of the city of Clinton, Henry County, Missouri. The transaction consisted of the trading of property owned by defendant in Colorado for certain properties owned by Mr. Bush in Kansas and Texas. Also present on that occasion were Waldon E. Jones and Mrs. Loretto Smith, respectively, the president and secretary of said sales company. As a result of that transaction, it was agreed that Mr. Bush owed defendant a balance of $481.40, which he would pay by check. Defendant suggested that there was an air conditioner in his property in Colorado and that if Mr. Bush would make the check for $500.00, he could have the air conditioner. Mr. Bush agreed and instructed Mr. Jones, who was representing and receiving a commission from Bush, to make out a check for that amount, and he, Bush, would repay him, Jones, when the deeds were executed and the amount of commission owed by Bush to S. & J. Sales Company was determined. Mr. Bush then went to his home in Clinton. Later that afternoon, defendant insisted that he and Jones go to Clinton and close the deal with Bush that evening. It was then late in the day and Jones did not want to go, but de
At the trial, Mrs. Smith produced an exact carbon copy of the check which was made at the time she prepared it in the manner hereinabove detailed. It was on a printed form for use as a carbon copy and was affixed in the checkbook under the original check form, with carbon paper placed between the original and the form for carbon copies of checks used out of that book. It shows beyond question, and the brief filed in behalf of defendant concedes, that when the check was received by defendant the handwritten numerals appearing thereon were “$500.00”. A duly qualified expert testified in detail as to the manner in which the numerals had been altered to show $5,000.00 instead of $500.00. At a “hearing” held either in Jackson or Henry County defendant admitted he had cashed the check
Of course, if the evidence does not support a finding that venue of the charge filed against defendant and of which he was convicted was properly laid in Henry County, Missouri, the judgment herein rendered cannot stand. We, therefore, direct our attention first to that question.
Section 541.030 provides: “Offenses committed against the laws of this state shall be punished in the county in which the offense is committed, except as may be otherwise provided by law.” Although there are special statutory provisions as to jurisdiction and venue of other offenses in the State of Missouri, there is none with respect to forgery. In the absence of such a statute, the venue of a prosecution for forgery is in the county where the forgery was actually committed and the offense of uttering a forged instrument must be tried in the county in which it was uttered. 22 C.J.S. Criminal Law § 185(15), page 476.
Due to the difficulty of proving the place of a forgery, the courts of this state have, in some instances, indulged in prima facie presumptions in order that a case may he made in the absence of evidence contradictory to the prima facie presumption so indulged. In these cases, it has been stated that possession of a forged instrument, or, at all events, the uttering of it in the county where the indictment or information is found is cogent evidence to be addressed to-the jury that the forgery was committed by the defendant in that county. State v. Yerger, 86 Mo. 33, 39; State v. Willard, 228 Mo. 328, 128 S.W. 749, 751-752; State v. Douglas, 312 Mo. 373, 278 S.W.1016, 1022.
These cases, .however, are of no aid in determining venue in this case. The evidence shows that it was uttered by defendant in Arkansas and there is not a scintilla of evidence to establish that the check was altered while in the possession of defendant in Missouri. The,only evidence even hinting at an effort to show that the check was altered by defendant in Henry County was-to the effect that he left the presence of the State’s witnesses for several minutes on the mission to get “cokes” and when he returned he seemed nervous, excited and in a hurry. (The evidence also shows that even before the check was executed he was “rushing and pushing”, saying that he had to go to Oklahoma.) It may also be noted that after leaving Potter’s office in Henry County defendant was in Jackson County, Missouri, as late as 10:00 o’clock the following morning. These facts present at most evidence that defendant had an opportunity to alter the check in Missouri; on the other hand, he also had an equal opportunity to alter it after he left Missouri. Consequently, any conclusion reached by the jury that the check was altered in Missouri could only rest upon pure speculation.
In this state of the record, the Attorney General, in the brief filed in behalf of the State, admits with commendable candor that although the guilt of defendant may be deemed evident, yet no rule of evidence has been found to support the proposition that a mere opportunity afforded him to alter the check in Missouri, especially when it was not uttered until he reached Fort Smith, Arkansas, would support a finding that the alteration occurred in Missouri. We are forced to the same conclusion and must hold that there is no evidence that defendant committed the crime here charged in the State of Missouri.
The judgment is reversed.