United States v. Folsom

7 N.M. 532 | N.M. | 1894

Smith, C. J.

The appellant, Stephen M. Folsom, was indicted in the district court for the Second judicial district, at the March term, 1894, upon four indictments, containing, respectively, four, thirteen, four, and'seventeen counts. The first indictment, the first six counts of the second indictment, the third indictment, and the first ten counts of the fourth indictment relate to alleged false entries made by defendant, as president of the Albuquerque National Bank, in reports to the comptroller of the currency of the condition of said bank on the days in the call for such reports named; and the remaining seven counts in each of the second and fourth indictments are as to alleged false entries made in the books of said bank as of its business on the ninth day of July, 1891, the seventh count in the second indictment charging the same offense as the eleventh in the fourth indictment, and so on successively to the thirteenth count in the second and to the seventeenth in the fourth indictment, making fourteen counts in the two charging only seven offenses. The first, second, and fourth of these indictments were on the motion of the prosecution, over the objection and exception of the defendant, consolidated, and directed to be tried as one case; and the defendant, stating that he in no way waived his exception to the consolidation of the other three, moved that the third be consolidated, which was ordered. On the four indictments thus consolidated as one case the' defendant was put on trial, and at the close of the testimony of the prosecution, moved for an instruction of not guilty as to each and every count, which motion was sustained as to all counts in said indictments which related to false entries in reports to the comptroller; aud the court, permitting the prosecution to reopen as to alleged false entries in the books of said bank, denied the motion of defendant as to those counts. In passing upon said motions and in the instructions when submitting the case to the jury, the court instructed that no testimony as to alleged false reports was to be considered by them, except that they might weigh the testimony as to the naking of the reports of the bank’s business as of July 9, 1891, as relating to the intent of the defendant in making such false entries on the books of the bank as of said day, if they should find any false entries were so made. The prosecution was then permitted to introduce evidence to show that a report for the bank’s business of said.July 9, 1891, .was called for by the comptroller. The testimony remaining before the jury for their consideration referred to the corporate existence of the Albuquerque National Bank as a national bank, to the defendant as its president, on the ninth day of July, 1891, and subsequently, and to a report and call for his business on said day, to the action of the defendant, after such call, causing the books of the bank to be changed by the insertion of items in the business of said ninth day of July, 1891, six of said items being set back from the business of said bank on the eleventh day of July, 1891. The said items consisted of four charges against other national banks, aggregating $30,000, and a credit to another national bank of $7,000, and a credit to said bank of certificates of deposit of $20,000, all of which were shown by undisputed evidence to represent actual transactions of said bank, occurring, as shown by evidence, to be as of said July 11, 1891. The seventh item related to the entry of a charge against the New Mexico Savings Bank & Trust Company of $15,000, as to which there was proof to show that defendant directed on July 21, 1891, a clerk of his bank to insert said item of $15,000 in the day’s business of July 9, 1891, so as to make it appear that said savings bank was indebted to the Albuquerque National Bank in the said amount of $15,000. The said defendant also directed the said clerk to make counter entries as to the said seven entries in the business of July 10, 1891. The $15,000 item represented no actual transaction. The said clerk was thereupon directed by the said president to prepare a report for transmission to the comptroller of the business of the bank of July 9, 1891, as the said business appeared with the said seven entries so placed, as heretofore represented, by the direction of the said president on about the said twenty-first day of July, 1891. The said clerk accordingly prepared said report, which was duly signed by the cashier, and attested by the defendant and two others as directors of said bank, and transmitted in due course of mail to the comptroller of the currency. Defendant testified in his own behalf that he made arrangements in Kansas City as to all the items except the $15,000, relating to the New Mexico Savings Bank & Trust Company, and telegraphed to the Albuquerque National Bank on the same day, upon which he made said arrangements in relation thereto; that, when he returned home, he found these items on the books of the bank as of the eleventh day of July, and directed them to be set back to July 9,1891, because he believed that the arrangements were actually consummated on said ninth day of July; that he didn’t remember having any connection whatever with the $15,000; and that he had given the said clerk no direction in reference thereto. The prosecution, in rebuttal, put in evidence letters of the defendant showing that no arrangement was completed as to said six items until July 11, the said defendant not having arrived in Kansas City until July 10. A large amount of expert and documentary evidence was introduced relating to the books of the bank and its business. The case was argued, and instructions given, and upon the fourteen counts upon which the case was submitted, a verdict of guilty was returned by the jury. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were made and overruled, and the case is now before this court upon appeal and numerous assignments of error, relating to the instructions of the court, to the disqualification of two jurors upon said jury by virtue of their age, to the action of the court in permitting the prosecution to reopen the evidence for the introduction of testimony as to a demand for a report by the comptroller, and upon the further ground that there was no testimony to support the verdict of the jury. Error is also claimed as to the action of the court in consolidating said seven indictments, and directing trial upon them as one case. In considering this case, we will address ourselves to the assignments of error in an order inverse to that in which they are set forth in the foregoing statement.

making false entries on books of national bank: consolidation of offenses in one indictment. The question of consolidation of indictments ceases, in our opinion, to be a practical question in this case, by reason of the court below instructing the jury to consider only the counts relating to alleged false entries in the books of the Albuquerque National ^ank> and directed, and there was accord-i;ngiy returned, a verdict of not guilty as to the other counts. The fourteen remaining counts were, in effect, one indictment. The seven charges in the one indictment were duplicated in the other indictment, which amounts to a pleading of the same matter twice. The instructions carefully guarded the defendant from all prejudice as to said unnecessary pleading. We do not, however, desire to be understood as intimating that any error was committed in the order of consolidation, or in entering upon the trial of said four indictments as one case. The offenses charged in all the indictments are of a like nature, and, we think, could have been presented in one indictment. One of the indictments, to which there was no demurrer or objection, embraced the only two classes of offenses which the four covered; and our view is that the four, being consolidated, became one indictment for trial, and it was fully within the discretion of the court, both to avoid unnecessary costs and undue vexation of the accused by multiplicity of prosecutions, to require only one trial upon all the charges on three of the indictments which were, on motion of the prosecution, consolidated, together with the fourth, added on motion of the defendant. This discussion we consider to have been definitely settled in Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Hillmon, 145 U. S. 285. See, also, section 1024 of the United States Revised Statutes, which we consider in operation in this territory in the trial of cause arising under the laws of the United States.

limitation: jur¡sdiction. In this connection we may briefly advert to the contention of appellant’s counsel that, because of the limitation of two years, as prescribed by the territorial statute, to this class of offenses, instead of three years, as fixed by the laws of the United States, this offense is barred. We think that our conclusion, heretofore set forth, that section 1024, Revised Statutes, applies to trials of causes arising under the laws of the United States, leads to the further conclusion that the United States limitation law governs him, rather than that of the territory. We are also of the opinion that, in any event, the territorial law would not apply in this case, as the jurisdiction of the district courts in trying offenses of this character is as separate and distinct from the jurisdiction in trying territorial causes as is the jurisdiction of state courts and United States courts held within the states. This contention of appellant, therefore, can not be sustained.

As to the exception that there is no evidence to ■support the verdict, we think that, for so voluminous a record as is presented for our consideration, the testimony is reduced to a narrow compass, and presents a direct issue of alleged false entries made, by direction of defendant, in the books of said bank, and that the .jury’s verdict is abundantly supported.

Evidence. The objection that there was illegal evidence admitted refers, we take it, from the able and elaborate brief of counsel for appellant, to the testimony introduced on the trial relating to the making of false entries, which testimony the court instructed the jury they must disregard; and, upon the counts relating thereto, the court directed an acquittal. No specific evidence is objected to, and, if illegal evidence relating to such matters was allowed, it could not, under the instructions of the court, have been considered by the jury. The jury were allowed to weigh the facts that a report of the condition of the bank as of July 9, 1891, was called for by the comptroller, and that such report was prepared and transmitted, the said evidence being allowed as indicating the intent of the defendant in making false entries in the books as of said ninth day of July, 1891; and.we do not see any error in the admission of such testimony for such purpose.

reopening of tí“eífeÍTd™ncec:' instructions. The alleged error in reopening the case for the introduction of evidence as to the call for a report is not well taken, as we are of the opinion that this matter was within the discretion of the court beíow, and is Brá i’eviewable here, unless the discretion be abused, and we do not recognize any mistake upon this point. Nor does it appear that the court below, in making more explicit its instructions, affected the rights of the defendant prejudicially.

There are numerous exceptions urged to the instructions of the judge who tried the case, relating mainly to those involving the intent of the defendant in directing said entries as of July 9,1891. It is claimed for appellant that the charge, as a whole, was unfair to the defendant, and in that connection it is stated that the commendation indulged in by the court as to the wisdom of the law under which the indictment was found, and its extended remarks as to reports to the comptroller of the currency and the penalties for noncompliance or wrong compliance with demands for such reports, were prejudicial to the defendant. We can not agree with the criticism suggested, as it is the duty of the court and of the jury to maintain the law, and it is the right of the court to apprise the jury as to the law and its purpose; and inasmuch as the testimony tended to show that the making of reports had an intimate connection with the making of alleged false entries in the books, and that these false entries were made to meet the demand for such reports, it was the duty of the court to fully explain the purpose for which said reports were called. The instructions of the court on these points were lengthy, but it is not easy to see that they could have been less elaborate and yet present satisfactorily the features they covered in connection with the trial.

instructions, Returning to the instructions regarding intent, we find that precedents are numerous in the federal courts in cases of prosecutions for making false entries and embezzlement by officers of national banks which not only fully sustain the instructions given in this case, but go far beyond tbe views enunciated by judge. Thus, we find in instructions to the jury by Jackson, J. (now on the bench of the supreme court of the United States), in U. S. v. Harper, 33 Fed. Rep. 471, that the conclusion of guilty intent is drawn from the fact of a willful and intentional doing of a wrongful act, and that it devolves on the defendant to show that it is excusable. In U. S. v. Graves, 53 Fed. Rep. 634, in U. S. v. Lee, 12 Fed. Rep. 816, and in U. S. v. Means, 42 Fed. Rep. 599,—all instances of instructions to juries in false entry and embezzlement cases, — it is held that every one is presumed to intend the legitimate consequences of his acts, and that, if he willfully and intentionally does a wrongful deed, he will not be permitted to say that there was innocent intent. In the case at bar the defendant was permitted to testify that his acts were not committed with any wrongful intent, and the court below strongly cautioned the jury that, if they found there was an honest, unintentional mistake, the defendant should be acquitted. The cases from California relied on so strongly by appellant’s counsel do not, in our opinion, sustain their contention. It appears that in People v. Ribolsi, 89 Cal. 498, the court held that it was error to instruct in the case under consideration that when the doing of the act which, if coupled with a guilty intent, would be a violation of law, is proven, the burden of showing the act to have been done without guilty intent is thrown upon the accused; and in its decision the supreme court approved the principle announced by the court below, the error being that it was not applicable to the case at bar. Thus in the case of buying stolen goods, knowing them to have been stolen, with certain intents mentioned in the statute, the supreme court declared that the way in which the instruction was given misled the jury into presuming guilty intent from buying goods knowing them to have been stolen, while the statute drew the conclusion of guilty intent from the proof of other facts showing the specific intent, set forth in the statute itself. People v. Perini, 94 Cal. 573, was a case exactly similar, and the court merely referred to People v. Ribolsi in reversing the lower court. All the other cases cited by counsel tend to support the principle that the burden of proof never shifts to the defendant to establish the facts from which intent can be inferred by the jury, but do not touch the question of guilty intent inferrable from facts satisfactorily established. In the case now under consideration the court instructed that, if the jury believed beyond a reasonable doubt that the wrongful act had been intentionally committed, prima facie, but not conclusively, a guilty intent existed. This principle we regard as sound in law. We have considered with care the instructions as a whole, and approve them as a fair and full exposition of the law. There may be inaccuracies in some respects, but we can not conclude that defendant was prejudiced, or that his legal rights were in the least unfavorably affected.

disqualification Sewe&iXrors: It is urged most vigorously by counsel for appellant that a new trial should have been granted, upon the ground that two of the jurors on the panel were disqualified, because they were over the age of sixty years. The record shows that the disqualification, if it in fact existed, was brought to the attention of the court in the motion for a new trial, accompanying which were the affidavits of appellant and his counsel and of other parties claiming to be cognizant of the ages of the jurors Jose Dario Aragon and Jose Rafael Sanches y Sedillo, together with extracts from the baptismal church register of the old Albuquerque Catholic church, pretending to be the record of the ages of the said persons. It appears in the affidavits of appellant and his counsel that neither knew of any disqualification of said jurors at the time the said jury was impaneled; that they relied upon the examination'of the persons accepted at the opening of the term of the court as to their qualifications, and were ignorant of the status of any of the said jurors; but that, during the progress of the trial of this case, one of the counsel “received a vague suggestion” that possibly Aragon was over sixty years of age; but that both counsel were so closely occupied with the trial that they had no opportunity or time to investigate the matter, and obtained 'no information until after the verdict had been rendered. It was also shown that Aragon had already testified in the United States court of private land claims that he was over sixty years of age. It appears as to Sanches that the name given in the baptismal certificate isthat’of Jose Rafael Befugio Querino, son of Q-abriel Sanches and Juana Sedillo. Two witnesses, claiming to be older than Sanches, stated that he is the son of Grabriel Sanches and Juana Sedillo, and they believe him to be more than sixty years of age, but they do not pretend to state exactly the age of Sanches; one placing it at sixty-seven or sixty-eight and the other at sixty-three. If the baptismal certificate refers to the juror under consideration, he was at the time of the trial in his sixty-eighth year, and it would seem that such an advanced age would naturally have excited inquiry. It is shown by the record that inquiry of Sanches as to his age was made by counsel for defendant, and he said that he was fifty-six years old. Aragon, it seems, was not asked as to his age. The foregoing facts as to the ages of these jurors necessitates the determination by this court of the question whether the disqualification of jurors not challenged at the time of their selection, either through lack of knowledge or intentional omission, can be taken advantage of after verdict. We are not without authority upon this subject by the decisions of this court. In Anderson v. Territory, 4 N. M. 232, and Territory v. Baker, 4 N. M. 275, it was decided that alienage, though a disqualification under the statute then in existence, was such a species of disqualification as could not be taken advantage of after verdict, it being a cause for challenge. Aliens do not belong to that class of persons liable to be summoned as jurors, the policy of the law being to make such persons ineligible because of their noncitizenship; while persons over the age of sixty years, formerly merely exempt, can not now be regarded as incompetent, except in the interest of the public. This court distinctly held in Anderson v. Territory that the accused should proceed by challenge to prevent an alien being retained on the panel to try him before he could be heard after verdict to object to the verdict because of such alienage. If noncitizenship is not such disqualification as to vitiate a verdict, it is illogical to contend that any disqualification of an intelligent citizen, whether such disqualification be express or implied, should produce that result. That age of itself, unaccompanied by any impairment of the intellect, should create incompetency for jury service, seems irrational; and it must be conceived that the statutory dictum proscribing such persons must have been induced by consideration in the interest of the territory, without reference to its effect upon the accused.

false entries: intent: verdict, It appears that one of the counsel in this case for the defendant had been advised that one of the jurors exceeded the limitation of years fixed by the statúte, but they did not regard this suggestion of sufficient moment to bring it to the attention of the court,, or to object to further proceedings in the trial, upon the ground that the said juror was incompetent because of his age. It may be that counsel did not regard the age of the juror as material; and, in the absence of evidence to establish with absolute certainty that the said Sanches was' objectionable in this respect, the court, in the interest and promotion of justice, may well have regarded ib in the same way. But little reliance can be placed upon the ex parte statement of the two old men as to the age of Sanches, as against his own oath; and it would be a dangerous precedent to encourage the procurement of affidavits to annul a verdict not objectionable upon the merits of the case. Whether the child who was baptized in 1826 under the name of Jose Rafael Refugio Querino Sanches was the- juror of said name in part might properly cause the court below to entertain such a doubt upon the question as to require it to refuse a new trial upon the ground of the alleged defect in this juror, in the absence of any provision, claim, representation, or proof that the rights of the defendant were affected prejudicially in the least by the fact that the said Sanches was a juror. It is established by overwhelming preponderance of authority that the disqualification of petit jurors must be taken advantage of by challenge, upon the theory that proper diligence on the part of the acused can ascertain the status of the jurors offered in all respects, and that a failure to challenge for causéis an omission that amounts to a waiver of objection, even though the juror was within the statutory proscription, unless it should appear that such disqualification would operate injuriously to the accused in the rendition of the verdict. The law seems to be that neither alienage, age, nor other such disqualification can vitiate a verdict; and, unless it can be shown that these conditions result in some injury to the accused, they can not be asserted after verdict as a reason for setting it aside. We are of the opinion that the disqualifications, whether specified in express terms by statute or implied by the designation of a particular class as eligible for jurors, are, in effect, the same; and inasmuch as it is not disputed seriously that the latter class are ineligible only, and not incompetent, we can not appreciate the reason for any severer rule against the other. Public policy induces the exclusion of both, and the considerations that have prevailed with the courts to construe the law as to one are not less applicable to the other. Both are competent to serve if not objected to at the proper time; and the interests of the public that prevent the defeat of a trial, and the annulling of a verdict, because of the disqualification implied,, should be equally protected against such consequences when the disqualification is in terms expressed. In either case prejudice shown would be properly ground for a new trial, and in either case the absence of it must remove all valid ground of objection to the verdict. The application of these principles to the case under consideration approves the action of the court in refusing to grant a new trial upon the ground of the disqualification of the two jurors, and in passing judgment upon the verdict,- so well supported by the evidence, properly submitted to the jury. It is not deemed essential to a proper consideration of the merits of this case to pass upon the the multiplicity of errors assigned, as we are impressed that jury; in finding that false entries were made with the intent alleged in the indictment, is sustained by the testimony of the defendant that the said entries were made under his direction, with the knowledge on his part, as shown by the evidence, that they were not transactions of the day on which they were entered in the books of the bank. Judgment of lower court affirmed.

Freeman, Fall, and Laug-hlin, JJ., concur.
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