87 Va. 672 | Va. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the court.
The indictment here is founded on section 3737 of the Code of Virginia, 1887: “If any person forge any writing * * * to
The indictment in the case at bar contains two counts—one for forging and- the other for uttering, knowing it to be forged, a certain writing of the tenor following:—“Office of H. M. Smith & Co., Manufacturers of Agricultural Machinery, Richmond, Va., Feb’y 18, 1886. J. O. Terry, Esqr., Dear Sir—Yours of the 9th inst. to hand. We enclose a statement of your account. It agrees with yours very nearly, as you will see. You owe us $7.38, and you - the note for $412. It was cancelled and sent you by mail last-. If you did not receive it, it is probably in the dead letter office at Washington; but it was mailed, marked ‘paid,’ and' cancelled, so it cannot be of any use to any one.
“Yours truly,
“Smith & McGuire,
“ Receivers.
The indictment avers that the accused, being at that time indebted to H. M. Smith & Co., forged the writing described. The paper as set out in the indictment, shows, on its face, with no averment of extrinsic circumstances to connect Smith & McGuire, receivers, with H. M. Smith & Co., that it was incapable of affecting or prejudicing the rights of H. M. Smith & Co., as defensive evidence in a suit or demand by them on any
In the case of Glass v. Commonwealth, 33 Gratt., 832, the court said: “To authorize a valid conviction of an offence, it must be sufficiently charged in the indictment or information. Every material ingredient of the offence must be so charged, otherwise there can be no legal conviction in the case; for admitting the charge to be literally true, it does not follow that the accused was guilty of any offence.” The judgment in that case was arrested because the offence was not sufficiently alleged in the indictment.
Forgery is the fraudulent making of a false writing, which, if genuine, would be apparently of legal efficacy. Bishop on Crim. Law (3d edition), sections 495 and 499.
The instrument must appear on its face to be, or be in fact, one which, if true, would ,be valid or legally capable of effecting- a fraud. Writings invalid on their face are not subjects of forgery. If incomplete or uncertain on their face, so that their legal efficacy is dependent on extrinsic circumstances, then such extrinsic matters must be averred in the indictment. (Bishop’s Crim. Law (3d edition), 2d Vol., sections 503, 506, 511, 505, 512.)
The writing alleged in the indictment to have been forged, is signed “ Smith & McGuire, receivers.” What Smith, of all the Smiths? and what McGuire? Receivers of whom? By
Judgment reversed.