152 Mo. 115 | Mo. | 1899
At the August term, 189Y, of the Scotland county circuit court, the defendant was indicted for forging a certain note for fifty dollars of the tenor following: “$50.00. Memphis, Mo., July 28th, 189Y.
“One hundred and twenty days after date for value received we promise to pay to the order of the Scotland County National Bank of Memphis, fifty dollars at its banking house in Memphis, Mo., with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from maturity, payable annually, and if not so paid to become as principal and bear the same rate of interest.
“Robert Williams,
“Edward Butler.”
Prior to the finding of this indictment defendant had been indicted in the same county at the preceding February -term of said court for having feloniously had in his possession a certain false, forged and counterfeited promissory note of the same tenor of the one he is charged in this indictment with having forged, which said promissory note he sold and delivered to one Robert M. Barnes, with intent to have the same
’When the indictment in this last case was filed defendant filed a special plea in bar, in which he alleged that he was charged in said indictment with uttering the forged instrument therein described, knowing the same to be forged and pleaded not guilty thereto, and that thereupon afterwards the court ordered a trial of defendant on said indictment, a jury of twelve- good and lawful men were duly impaneled, sworn and charged with the deliverance of defendant, who after hearing the evidence returned a verdict acquitting defendant of said charge. He concluded his plea as follows: “And the said Harry Williams in fact saith that he, the said Harry Williams and the said Harry Williams so indicted and acquitted as last aforesaid are one and the same person and not other and different persons, and that the felonious uttering, knowing the same to have been a forged note, as described in said indictment are one and the same forged instrument, charged in the present indictment, and not other and different notes; that in the present indictment to which he files this as a plea in bar or in abatement he is charged with forging the identical same instrument that he was charged with uttering, knowing the same to be forged, in the indictment on which he was tried and acquitted and no other or different instrument. Wherefore he claimsthat he has been put in jeopardy for the said offense with which he is now charged in said prior indictment and of this he, the same Harry Williams, is ready to verify. Wherefore he prays judgment and that by the court here he may be dismissed from said premises in the present indictment specified.” The plea was subscribed and sworn to by defendant.
Thereupon the State filed a demurrer to said plea, which is in words and figures, as follows:
“Now comes the plaintiff, by her prosecuting attorney and demurs to the plea in abatement filed in -above cause by defendant, and for reason assigns:
*120 “First: The plea in abatement filed does not set up any defense to the charge against defendant, alleged in the indictment now against him.
“Second: Said plea in abatement sets forth the fact that the defendant had heretofore been prosecuted and acquitted on a different and distinct charge and for a different and distinct offense from that charged in the indictment against him, and to which he now pleads in abatement.”
The court sustained the demurrer to said plea, and denied defendant the right to have the same tried by a jury.
This action of the court presents the first question involved in this record. Did the plea present anything more than a question of law ? Did the court err in refusing to submit it to a jury?
It is obvious that it simply pleads the record of defendant’s acquittal of a criminal charge, and the demurrer of the State admits the existence of that record, but says conceding all that it shows, it is not a bar to the indictment in this case. Granting as we may freely do that when a plea of former conviction or acquittal tenders an issue of both law and fact that it should be tried by a jury, as inState v. Huffman, 136 Mo. 58, it does-not follow that when as in this case the identity of the prisoner and the record of the former indictment, trial and acquittal are admitted by the State, that there is anything for a jury to pass upon. The legal efficacy of the record offered to sustain the discharge from the crime charged in this second indictment was solely a question of law which the court was bound to decide.
Bishop in his New Criminal Procedure, volume 1, section 816, sub-sections 1 and 5, says: “The question of identity, both of the parties and of the offense, being settled, the court determines as of law whether or not there has been a previous conviction or acquittal.” This must be so, for whether the second indictment charges the same offense as that set forth in the plea can be decided only by an inspection of the record and
In a word, it is the accepted doctrine, resting alike upon precedents and reason, that where a plea of former conviction or acquittal on its face shows the defendant is not indicted for the offense described in the special plea, a demurrer is the proper step.
No error was committed in not submitting the sufficiency of the plea to a jury.
II. The vital question is, did the court decide the demurrer correctly?
At the base of this inquiry lies the guaranty of our Constitution, that “no person shall, after being once acquitted by a jury, be again; for the same offense, put in jeopardy of life or liberty.” Sec. 23, art. II, Constitution of Missouri (1875).
Section 3951, Revised Statutes 1889, provides: “When a defendant shall be acquitted or convicted upon any indictment, he shall not thereafter be tried or convicted of a different degree of the same offense, nor for an attempt to commit the offense charged in the indictment, or any degree thereof, or any offense necessarily included therein, provided he could have been legally convicted of such degree or offense, or attempt to commit the same, under the first indictment.”
In State v. Huffman, 136 Mo. loc. cit. 62, this court quoted with approval the following language of the Supreme Court of Vermont in State v. Smith, 43 Vt. 324: “When one offense is a necessary element in and constitutes an essential part of another offense, and both are in fact but one transaction, a conviction or acquittal of one is a bar to the prosecution for the other.”
These constitutional and' statutory provisions are so explicit in and of themselves that little room is left for judicial
Is this true? Is the offense charged in the first indictment the same as that charged in the present indictment, or is it a different degree of the offense charged in this one, or was it necessarily included in the former indictment?
The first indictment was drawn under and charged the crime denounced in section 3634, Revised Statutes 1889, or in other words it charged defendant Avith knowingly uttering a forged instrument.
This.indictment charges an offense under section 3633, to wit, the forging of said instrument by the defendant himself. It stood admitted by the demurrer that the defendant in this case Avas the same person Avko was tried for uttering the forged note. It stood admitted, moreover, that this was the instrument he was charged to have uttered, knowing it was a forgery. This Avas clearly not an admission, however, that these two offenses were one and the same, or that one Avas a degree of the other, or that it was essential to the proof of the crime of uttering a forged instrument to have proA^ed that defendant himself Avas the forger.
Under our statutes they are distinct and separate crimes. The Supreme Court of Arkansas in Ball v. State, 48 Ark. loc. cit. 102, said: “Eorgery is one offense, and uttering a forged instrument as genuine, knowing it to be false and forged, is another and distinct offense. A party might be convicted of cither without being guilty of the other.”
The doctrine maintained in many of the States that counts for each of said offenses may be joined in one indictment and the State not compelled to elect, does not affect the question. [People v. McMillan, 52 Mich. 627; State v.
Upon the whole we think the circuit court did not err in sustaining this plea.
III. The objection as to the failure to prove the incorporation of the Scotland County National Bank, can not be sustained. It was not necessary to prove the existence of the bank by a certified copy of its charater. It was shown, without objection, that there was such a bank, and that several of the witnesses were its officers, and that the note was sold to its cashier. After verdict it is too late to question the character of the evidence introduced to show the existence of the bank. The allegation was moreover not to defraud said bank, but simply to defraud.
TY. Error is assigned on the instruction given by the court to the effect that one who is recently in possession of and attempts to sell or obtain money on a forged note is presumed to have forged the same, and unless such possession or forgery is satisfactorily explained, the presumption becomes conclusive.
In State v. Allen, 116 Mo. loc. cit. 556, it was ruled that the presumption arising from the possession of the fruits of crime has with reason and propriety'been indulged in prosecutions for forgery. The same, considerations have actuated the courts as obtained in larceny and burglary, in which the
Tested by these repeated rulings there was no error in the instruction.
Y. "We have examined the other points raised by counsel, but they do not constitute reversible error.
Finding no error the judgment must be and is affirmed.