Fletcher was convicted on both counts of a two-count indictment charging him with unlawfully and fraudulently causing a forged and falsely made check to be transported in interstate commerce knowing the check to have been thus forged and falsely made, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. Each count related to a different check. Fletcher was thereafter sentenced to a term of three years on each count, the sentences to be served concurrently. The sentences were then suspended and Fletcher was placed on probation for three years. Fletcher now seeks reversal of his several convictions.
It is agreed that one essential element of the crime with which Fletcher was charged is that in causing the check in question to be transported in interstate commerce, he did so with an “unlawful and fraudulent intent.” And in this particular connection Fletcher alleges that the trial court erred in merely instructing the jury that “an act is done ‘fraudulently’ if done with the intent to deceive.” Such instruction (instruction No. 8) was inadequate, according to counsel, and the trial court should have gone further and instructed the jury that “an act is done with fraudulent intent if done with an intent to defraud, or with an intent to deceive for the purpose of obtaining money or something of value.”
See
Halfen v. United States,
It is axiomatic that no one instruction states all the law and that the instructions in a given case must be taken and considered as a whole. Devine v. United States,
Fletcher also assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to give the jury his tendered instructions numbered 1 and 2. Each of these tendered instructions pertained, in some degree, to the phrase “forged and falsely made” as such appears in each count of the indictment. Tendered instruction No. 1 we deem to be inapplicable, in that it was premised on the assumption that the cheeks deposited by Fletcher in the Central National Bank in Oklahoma City were so-called “true-name” checks, which type of check, according to Marteney v.
*621
United States,
Tendered instruction No. 2 advised the jury that in order for them to find that the checks in question were forged or falsely made they must find that “the payee, Central National Bank, relied upon the signature of B. J. Hawthorne * * In the first place, Central National Bank was not the payee on either check; rather, each check was made payable to a company owned by Fletcher. The payee companies (a different payee on each check) had checking accounts in the Central National Bank, and the checks here in question were deposited by Fletcher to such accounts in the Central National Bank. So, the tendered instruction was incorrect insofar as the facts of the case are concerned and in addition thereto it was also otherwise inapplicable. In short, we perceive no error as regards instructions given or instructions refused.
Error is also predicated upon the refusal of the trial court to permit Fletcher to testify as to certain of his prior dealings with the Central National Bank. When the objection to this line of testimony was sustained, no offer of proof was made. In this regard the well established rule is that if the significance of the excluded evidence is not obvious, an offer of proof must be made to preserve the question on appeal. Downie v. Powers,
Lastly, it is asserted that the trial court erred in failing to sustain Fletcher’s motion for acquittal interposed at the conclusion of the prosecution’s case “for the reason that lack of authorization to sign the name of another does not prima facie constitute the crime of forgery.” In thus arguing, counsel relies on Parker v. United States,
Judgment affirmed.
