Defendant appealed from a conviction for forgery in the second degree and a sentence of two years in the penitentiary. Defendant was charged with forging a check for $35.00 “purporting to be the act of one Harold A. Harvey” and “purporting to be drawn on the Bosworth State Bank.”
No bill of exceptions has been filed so only errors appearing on the record proper are before us. (State v. Abbott, Mo. Sup.,
Defendant contended no crime was charged bythe information herein, and filed a motion to quash, relying on State v. Dobbins,
It is clear from reading Section 561.080 that it covers two separate kinds of offenses and that the part designated as “second” covers the offense charged in this case, namely: forgery of a check purporting to' be drawn on a bank by some other person. This part of the statute was overlooked in the Dobbins case. The reference to this statute in the Milligan case was also concerning a promissory note, and not to a cheek. However, the defendant therein was charged with forgery of a promissory note, not of a bank but of a private person. Forgery of a promissory note of a, private person is covered by another statute and is forgery in the third degree. (See Sec. 561.160, R. S. 1949.) In the Milligan case, the charge was under the third degree forgery statute but the instructions to the jury stated the punishment provided for' second degree forgery and- con
The verdict herein is in proper form and responsive to the issues made by the charge in the information. The verdict found defendant “guilty of forgery in the second degree as charged in the information” and assessed his punishment in accordance with the statute providing for the punishment of forgery in the second degree. (Section 4594, R. S. 1939, Section 561.330, R. S. 1949; as to form of verdict see State v. Todd, Mo. Sup.,
