71 Mo. 613 | Mo. | 1880
The defendant was indicted for forgery in the first degree, for forging a certificate of a recorder on a deed of trust, and on trial had was found guilty, and his punishment assessed at ten years imprisonment in the penitentiary. The section under which the indictment was found provides that, “every person who shall forge or' counterfeit * * aiiy certificate or indorsement of the filing'or recording of any such will, deed or other instrument, which, by law, may be recorded, or purporting to have been made by an officer authorized to make such certificate or indorsement, with intent to defraud, shall he adjudged guilty of forgery in the first degree.” Rev. Stat., 1879, §1379, p. 242.
The instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, was, but for the consideration hereafter mentioned, properly denied, and this is apparent for the following reasons : The forgery of the certificate of registry was established, so also that defendant indorsed his name on the notes, so also, that the same hand which made that indorsement committed the forgery of the certificate of registry.
There is another point, which, though not made hither