268 Mo. 185 | Mo. | 1916
— Defendant was convicted in the Criminal Court of Jackson County of grand larceny, under the provisions of section '4566, Revised Statutes 1909, and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the State penitentiary for a term for two years. Pursuant to the usual procedure he has appealed.
''While the conviction here is, as stated, for grand larceny, it is for that alleged sort of grand larceny which the statute supra says may be bottomed upon false pretenses. So leaving out of view all questions regarding the legal propriety of such a conviction, because not involved in the conclusions we have reached, we are yet upon any view compelled to approach it on the theory that if it be grand larceny it is so only because it involves obtaining money by such false pretenses as constitute grand larceny. Therefore, absent such false pretenses as are criminal, it is obvious that there can be no grand larceny in the case.
Looking therefore to the facts upon which the alleged false pretenses are bottomed, we find these facts to run substantially thus: The prosecuting witness, one T. M. Brown, was at all the times mentioned in this record engaged in business as a merchant in Kansas City, Missouri; the defendant seems to have been engaged in business as a druggist in said city. Upon a time shortly prior to the happening of the matters and things set forth in the record before us, defendant seems to have
After some further conversation and discussion of the matter Brown and the defendant entered into a written contract, under the terms of which Brown paid to defendant the sum of $125' in cash, which sum constitutes the property herein alleged to have been obtained by false pretenses, and agreed upon a contingency therein named, and below made clear in the instrument we set out, to pay to him an additional sum of $125. The cash payment made by Brown to defendant was, upon the contingency set forth in said contract, to be returned. This agreement is as follows:
“This agreement entered into this 12 day of August, 1912, by and between L. A. Jamison of Kansas City, Missouri, and O. B. Jamison of St. George, Utah, parties of the first part, and T. M. Brown of Kansas City, Missouri, party of the second part.
“Whereas, The said L. A. and O. B. Jamison agree to maintain a squatter’s right on the west óne-half of section 33, Jamison survey, located in Pipe Valley, Mohave County, Arizona, for and in the interests of said T. M. Brown; and further agree to look after all improvements on said one-half section of Jamison Survey, until the party of the second part secures his deed from the Government to said one-half section 33, Jamison Survey, for which service the parties of the first part hereby acknowledge receipt of $125, the said party of the second part further agreeing to pay $125 additional when he files with the Government, or within a period of time not to exceed three months thereafter; provided the party of the second part finds the above described' land as represented.
“If, however, the party of‘the second part does not find this land as represented to him by the parties of the first part, or the entire proposition is not found to be as represented, in so far as ability to secure possession of same under the Smoot Act, then the parties of the*191 first part agree to return to party of the second part the $125 advanced payment, above mentioned and to waive the payment of the additional $125, then this contract to become null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.
“In witness whereof, the said parties have hereunto set their names, this 12 day of August, 1912, A. D. ”
Sometime after the said sum of $125 was paid by Brown to defendant, Brown went west with a view of examining the Pipe Valley, the locus in quo, and the tract of land described in the above written agreement. It was arranged for him to meet in the West the brother of defendant, said O. B. Jamison, who is jointly indicted herein with defendant, and who w§,s to show Brown the land on which defendant claimed that he and this brother had “squatter’s rights.” In passing, ■it will no doubt be noted that the lands are said in the written agreement above to be located in “Pipe Valley.” In the light of the facts of this case, the name given to this flowery valley seems significant, if not sinister.
Brown did not go upon these lands or see them, when he reached the vicinity of their alleged location, but having met said O. B. Jamison at a point some forty or fifty miles distant from Pipe Valley, and upon informing the latter of the representations made by defendant to him (Brown) that he would not be required to reside upon this land in order to homestead it, he was told by Jamison that if he expected to acquire title to these lands under the homestead law without actual residence thereon he would as well go home and get his money back from defendant. Thereupon Brown turned back and returned home to Kansas City without ever having seen Pipe Valley at all.
Other witnesses in the case from whom money in greater or less amounts was gotten by defendant upon similar representations and contracts, did go upon these lands and found them when examined, noí to be- as to
A most flamboyant and highly colored pamphlet, descriptive of Pipe-Valley, was printed and circulated by defendant. But since this pamphlet was not in existence at the time the money in controversy was obtained by defendant from Brown, we need not notice the statements contained in it, further than to say that according to Brown the statements made to him orally by defendant were similar to and equally as complimentary and highly colored as those contained in the pamphlet. Other witnesses, however, who testified as to other similar transactions with defendant, and who were offered by the State for the purpose of showing-intent, did, they swear, pay defendant money on account of the representations contained in the pamphlet mentioned.
Upon the trial, and upon being asked to state specifically on what facts he relied when he paid defendant the money here in question, Brown -answered categorically and repeatedly that he relied solely upon the statements to him of defendant that he could get this land and obtain a title to it under the homestead laws of the United States without being required to take up or maintain an actual residence on it. Being asked whai the payment of the $125 in question here -was made to defendant for, Brown said that this payment was for getting this land, for looking after it and perfecting the title when it was surveyed and for doing certain improvements, and that in addition, for the service above mentioned, he was to give defendant a further sum of $125.
When Brown got-back home to Kansas City from the West, pursuant to the advice in such behalf given to him by O. B. Jamison, he went at once to defendant and demanded re-payment of the $125 which he had paid defendant. Defendant repeatedly promised to pay this
In passing, we may say that we have been unable to find anything in the record either describing the exact nature or negativing the existence of the alleged “squatter’s right” claimed by defendant to be held in these lands by him and his.brother; nor have we found any evidence as to whether or not defendant and his brother, or either of them, had any title, claim or rights— “squatter’s rights” or any other sort — therein. The record seems to be silent as to this. But since, in the view we are compelled to take of this case upon the record before us, we are not impressed that it greatly matters whether these particular statements were false or not. The record is filled with a great mass of representations as to the nature and qualities and condition of the soil, climate, water, moisture, population, products, fauna and flora of Pipe Yalley, and so mixed and tangled are these representations in thfe setting, as to make it difficult to pick and choose from the record those things which are permitted to be said, for that they fall into the category of “puffing,” and those which are forbidden, because they are false representations which fall into the category of criminal acts. But as stated, in the view we take of this case we do not deem it necessary to pass upon these points.
To make clear the discussion some further facts will be found further along in the opinion.
Among other Contentions it is urged that the evidence offered by the State (the defendant put in none) is not sufficient to make out a case. This contention is bottomed upon the fact that T. M. Brown, the prosecuting witness here and the person to whom the alleged false pretenses relied on for conviction were made, specifically says:
*194 “I relied upon what he told me ahont this land, and that I could get it absolutely without living on it, and I told him I would not have the land any other way, that I could not leave my business. Pie says you don’t have to leave your business. You can stay right in China and any other seaport and get this land. All you have to do is go out and file on it after the Q-overnment surveys it and we will look after the balance of it. That is what I relied on. ’ ’
On this state of facts defendant urges he cannot be convicted: because the pretense relied on, while false, is but as to a matter of law, which defendant’s learned counsel urge, Brown is to be held, by a well-settled presumption, to know. In short, that knowledge as to the laws of the United States which fix the period and nature of the residence required in order to procure and “prove up” title on lands under the Homestead Law, will be imputed to Brown, and that a palpable lie touching same, will not constitute a felony in defendant, though the latter thrive financially thereby.
We state the case thus baldly and bluntly, though there is evidence (doubtless, however, for the triers of fact) from Brown himself, that he was not in fact misled, but that he knew the nature and period of the residence required upon lands sought to be homesteaded were not as represented to him by defendant. For discussing this matter with defendant, Brown said: “You and I all know, to homestead or anything like that you have to live on it about seven months in the year; I says, U could, not leave my business and go out and stay seven months in the year. ’ ’ ’ But we put aside the thought suggested by this condition of the record, and take the case upon the blunt point upon which respective counsel have seen fit to submit it: Is it a crime under section 4565', Revised Statutes 1909, to obtain money or property by falsely representing the status of the domestic law?
Coming back to the question of false pretenses, we are impelled to hold that no felony can be committed in this State by falsely or mistakenly representing the domestic law to be that which it is not. It does not greatly matter in so holding whether this view is reached upon the theory of that fictional presumption for procedural convenience that ignorance of the law excuses no one, and that therefore all men are presumed to know the law; or whether it be based upon the view that no criminal false pretense may be bottomed upon a representation wherein the ascertainment of the truth or falsity of the fact averred is as open to him to whom the representation is made as it is to him who makes it. [State v. Lawrence, 178 Mo. 350; State v. Cameron, 117 (Mo. 641; State v. Barbee, 136 Mo. l. c. 445; State v. Anderson, 186 Mo. 25.]
The actions of the defendant here were reprehensible and morally inexcusable and he seems to merit richly the punishment which the jury assessed against him. But we cannot in order to punish him write into
‘£ The expression of this court in State v. Cameron, 117 Mo. 1. c. 648, may be very appropriately applied to the facts of this case. Gantt, J., speaking for the court, said: £It is not the policy of the law to punish as a crime the making of every foolish or’ ill-considered agreement. If it is, the jails and prisons must be greatly enlarged. ££ Where the pretense is absurd, or irrational, or such as the party injured had, at the very time the means of detecting at hand, it is not within the act. ’ ’ ’
"To the same effect is the case of State v. Barbee, 136 Mo. l. c. 445. It was said in that case by Sherwood, J.: £It is well settled law, both in this. State and elsewhere, that it is not every false pretense which can be made the basis of a criminal prosecution. It must be such an one as is calculated to deceive. ’ ”
This conclusion is in line with the rule in other jurisdictions even in civil cases, wherein the rule against pretenses of the sort here under discussion ought to be more.strictly construed against the tortfeasor than in a criminal case. Nevertheless, the rule is, that in a civil case a man will not be heard to contend that he was misled by a false representation of the domestic — as contradistinguished from the foreign — law of a given ease or matter. [Upton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. l. c. 50; Gorm
“That a misrepresentation or misunderstanding of the law will not vitiate a contract, where there is no misunderstanding of the facts, is well settled. •
“In Fish v. Cleland, 33 Ill. 243, the principle is expressed in these words: ‘A representation of what the law will or will not permit to be done is one on which the party to whom it is made has no right to rely; and if he does so it is his folly, and he cannot ask the law to relieve him from the consequences. The truth or falsehood of such a representation can be tested by ordinary vigilance and attention. It is an opinion in regard to the law, and is always understood as such.’ [See Starr v. Bennett, 5 Hill, 303; Lewis v. Jones, 4 B. & C. 506; Rasdhall v. Ford, Law Rep. 2 Eq. 750.]
“The law is presumed to be equally within the knowledge of all parties. ’ ’
Since it is among the canons of the criminal law that a rule of law out of tenderness and regard for life and liberty is to be construed more strictly in a criminal case than in a civil one, we do not hesitate in holding that there can be no conviction for falsely representing the domestic law to be that which it is not. We have found no case exactly in point in criminal law, but the analogous cases as well as the analogous rules are against the criminality of the act. While we repeat, the acts of the defendant here were wrong and immoral, and upon no view to be excused, yet the law is not an exact science, and to hold that an erroneous or false representation of the domestic law upon a given point is a crime, would be to open a very Pandora’s box of evils to the undoing of business contracts, and to make the criminal courts the guardians of all financial improvidents. Moreover, it is obvious, that in practice it would not
Since the prosecuting witness again and again stated that the sole reason he parted with his money was because he relied on defendant’s statement that the law is that no actual residence is now required in order to acquire a Government homestead, and since this is not such a representation as is denounced by our statute (Sec. 4565, R. S. 1909), the demurrer ,to the evidence should have been sustained.
This view makes unnéeessary an examination of the other points urged upon us for reversal. It must be held in mind that we are only passing upon the alleged false representation as to the law, upon which this case is specifically bottomed, and toward which the competent proof in this case is alone directed. Many other false representations touching the land in which defendant claims to have a “squatter’s right” are charged; some of these would in our view have been sufficient if proved, to show a felony; but touching such of these as are sufficient in substance, there is no proof to make them out. Many others standing alone fall into the category of mere puffing (Stonemets v. Head, 248 Mo. l. c. 264), and are no't actionable.
It follows that absent perjury it would seem to be not possible to strengthen this particular case upon another trial. Let it be reversed and the defendant discharged.