delivered the opinion of the court:
The sole question presented by the People on this writ of error is the correctness of the order of the Champaign County circuit court quashing a forgery indictment against defendant for failure to identify the person whom defendant intended to defraud.
The indictment charged defendant “committed the offense of forgery, in that he, with intent to defraud, knowingly delivered to Ralph E. Scogin, doing business as the Elbo Room, a check, a document apparently capable of defrauding another, drawn on the second national bank of danville, a corporation, in the sum of seventy-three dollars and eighty-five cents, ($73.85), knowing such check to be forged in such manner that it purported to have been made by James D. Willis, which check is in the words and figures following:”
(Here appears a photostatic copy of the check and endorsements.)
Defendant maintains (1) that forgery is a specific intent crime, and that identification of the person intended to be defrauded is essential to the validity of an indictment, and (2) the absence of such identification could subject defendant to a subsequent prosecution for the same offense, contrary to the constitutional safeguards against being twice put in jeopardy. Ill. Const. art. II, sec. 10; U.S. Const. amend. V.
The indictment was drawn under section 17 — 3 of the Criminal Code of 1961, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 38, par. 17 — 3), which is a codification of the separate sections relating to forgery previously found in sections 105 and 107 of division I of the prior Criminal Code. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 38, pars. 227 — 279.) Section 17 — 3 provides: “A person commits forgery when, with intent to defraud, he knowingly * * * (2) Issues or delivers such document knowing it to have been thus made or altered.” Section 17 — 3(b) defines an intent to defraud as “an intention to cause another to assume, create, transfer, alter or terminate any right, obligation or power with reference to any person or property.”
In support of his position defendant relies principally upon People v. Ernst,
One of the more recent decisions of this court, not cited by either party, is People v. Christison,
A substantial number of States have express legislative enactments obviating the need to allege an intent to defraud a specific person. In other States having no statutory solution to the question, the reviewing courts have considered the problem. In Johnson v. State, 35 Tex. Cr. 271,
It is apparent from the later decisions of this court that the implications of the earlier Pox and Ernst cases that the indictment must identify the person intended, to be defrauded have been abandoned, even though not expressly overruled, and such action accords with the demands of modern commerce in negotiable instruments. The gist of the offense of forgery is the intent to defraud involved in the making of a forged instrument or knowingly uttering the same. The offense is not less inimical to society, nor any more nor less harmful, by reason of the identity of the party defrauded or intended to be defrauded. As we state in People v. Peck, ante, p. 480, at 484, decided at this term, in holding it unnecessary to name the owner of property stolen in a burglary, “What the statute is concerned with is a generalized intent to commit a theft or felony within the building unlawfully entered. The indictment in this case charges the offense in the language of the statute, and the statute describes the offense with sufficient clarity. To require the allegation of a more particularized intent would be unrealistic.” So, here, the statute is concerned with the fraudulent intent involved in falsifying an instrument or knowingly delivering it; the action is deemed criminal because of an intent to defraud rather than because such an intent is directed toward a specific individual.
As further supporting his position defendant argues that the absence of identification of the person intended to be defrauded will subject defendant to subsequent prosecution for the same offense. A short answer to this lies in the fact that our prior decisions require the forged instrument to be set forth in the indictment (People v. Brown,
We therefore hold it unnecessary, in an indictment for forgery, such as here present which identifies the person to whom delivery was made and contains an allegation that the proscribed action was taken with an intent to defraud, to include an additional averment that it was done with intent to defraud a specific person.
The order of the circuit court of Champaign County quashing the indictment is accordingly reversed ■ and the cause remanded with directions to deny the motion to quash.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
