1 Port. 118 | Ala. | 1834
This was an indictment under the statute, against the prisoner, Wilson, charging him with larceny, the subject of which was four promissory notes of one hundred dollars each, being the property of Grice, the prosecutor. The prisoner was convicted in the Circuit Court of Dallas county. The case is presented for revision to this Court, on points reserved as novel and difficult, by the presiding Judge of the court below, pursuant to the authority of the statute in such cases provided.
All the questions of law arising upon a statement of the fects in evidence, and the instructions of the Circuit Judge to the jury, as well as the sufficiency of the indictment, are referred to the consideration of this court. The indictment contains two counts. The first of which, charges briefly, that the prisoner did feloniously steal, take, and carry away four promissory notes, for the payment of one hundred dollars each, and of the value of one hundred dollars each, the property of Carpenter Grice ; the said sum of four hundred dollars being then and there due and unpaid, contrary to the form of the statute, &c. without any further description of the notes, or the manner of the taking. The second cbunt sets out the special circumstances — describing the four promissory notes to be for the payment of one hundred dollars each, due one day after date, drawn by said Carpenter Grice
This count contains no averment more positive as to the value of the notes charged to have been stolen.
, The material facts in evidence were, that those notes were drawn by Grice, the prosecutor, to be discounted by Wilson,’ according to a previous understanding between them to that effect. That after the notes were drawn, the prosecutor retained them a short time in-his possession, when he delivered them to the prisoner at his request, and upon his promise that if he, the prosecutor, would accompany him to where he kept his money, five or six miles distant, he would pay him the sum agreed on for the notes ; that the prosecutor accompanied him; that the prisoner on arriving at the place, did not pay, but made excuses, and repeated assurances that he had the money in his pocket, and would pay ; that eventually he escaped privately, having previously disposed of the notes as his own.
On this state of facts, the court instructed the jury, that if the prosecutor made the notes for tire purpose of being discounted by the prisoner, and retained them in his possession i for a time, and afterwards, at the request of the prisoner, delivered them to him and the prisoner at the time of the delivery and his reception of the notes, had formed the design of converting them to his owiu use, without making payment,
The counsel for the prisoner assigns for error,
1st. That the indictment is insufficient, and no conviction shou1d~ have been had upon it.
2d. rJlhat the facts as stated in the record, if true, do not constitute the crime of larceny.
3d. The court erred in the chargé to the jury.
1. By statute, paper securities, among other bonds, bills of exchange, and promissory notes, for the payment of money, or of any specilic property, are made the subjects of larceny; and it is provided, that such larceny shall be punished in the same manner as larceny of goods and chattels.
As the first branch of this exception is peculiar to this case, depending on the particular phraseology of the concluding sentence in the court, and not likely again to occur, it is sufficient to say, that by a proper c~nstruction, with reference to the preceding description of the notes, charged to have been stolen, the words `~the said sum of four hundred dollars being then and there due and unpaid," must be1understood as referring to that amount secured by the notes, and not to so much cash taken. The conebsion obviously falls short of of the constitutional requisition, which, besides its paramount authority, is subsequent to the statute, which has dispensed with the necessity of at least part of this conclusion: but, the Attorney Geneneral insisted, that this insufficiency, if any, is cured by reference to the conclusion of the second count, which is in the form requi:ed. Whether a defect in the conclusion of one count, as this is conceived to e, can be aided by reference to another, especially if such or be also defec
As respects the second count, it may be observed, that the omission to charge the value of the notes, is a material defect, unaided in any manner.
The description of the dotes' as being of certain amounts, is not tantamount to an averment of their being of that value, nor a compliance with the well established.principle, that in- ’ dictments for larceny must state the value of the articles.
2, and 3. The two latter assignments are dependent on each other, and can only be examined in connection.
They involve, as a question vital to the prosecution, the inquiry, whether the notes were sufficiently consummated and valid, as legal securities for the payment of money, to be the subject of larceny ; and whether the charge was correct in assuming, that the .property in, or claim to the notes, had not been transferred and delivered to the prisoner as his own, on at least a short time given him by the prosecutor, for making the payment; or, in considering this latter fact immaterial, one of which appears from the statement of the record.
If any one entertaining the fraudulent and felonious design', of getting a hold on another’s property, and converting it to his own use, resort to a false pi’etense.or artifice to effect his «bje.ct, as the prjdfeer appears to have done, provided in fact,
Yet it is indispensibly necessary, that where bonds, notes, &c. are the subject, they must be, at the t~ine of receiving them legally valid, and subsisting securities for the payment of money, or some specific article of value. If these notes, for the want of consideration, or the incomplete state of the contract, had acquired no validity in the hands of any one, against the maker, no larceny could be committed in taking them; ~nd the principle applies with peculiar force in this stale, where the makers of bonds, notes, &c. are authorised, by statute, to avail themselves, as matter of defence, of any payment, set off, or discount, even when sued on the same by either indorsee or bearer of such securities.
The current of decisions by this court, has also been, that the word dis~ount in the statute, embraces tl1e want of consideration, fraud, or i11e~a1ity in the creation of the contract. The principle is recognised in the English courts, that if~a check be given on a verbal condition, wMch the drawer finds to be broken or eluded, he has a right to stop the payment; and in s~ich case, the instrument is but as waste paper, in the hands of anothers-Weenholt vs. Spilta, and others.
The particular question now under consideration, was not involved in that case; but the principle only, already noticed,, relative to the motive and character of the taking, which was-determined to have been felonious. The court remarked, that whether the prisoner had, at the time he received the notes, to be immediately exchanged for gold, the animus fu~ randi was the sole point on which the question of guilt turned. That “ as to what had been said with regard to the parting with the property, it had in truth never been parted with at all: That that could only be done by contract, which required the assent of two minds, and there was not the assent of tbe mind either of the prosecutor or of the prisoner ; the prosecutor only meant to part with his notes on the faith of having the gold in return, and the prisoner never meant to barter, but to steal.” The manner of -obtaining possession of the bank notes by the prisoner in that case was similar to that by which the present prisoner gained possession of the promissory notes, as charged by the prosecutor; and, on the supposition that the jury trying this case, so determined the facts, the consequence would have been the same, but for the objection, that these notes thus- fraudulently obtained, without consideration, had not yet acquired validity as available securities for the payment of the money mentioned in them. Tlie case of King vs. Aikles,
If this objection did not exist, we are also of opinion, that the Circuit Court ought to have submitted the question of fact to the jury, whether or not the claim or property in the notes was not actually transferred to the prisoner by the agreement, and delivery of the notes by the prosecutor, on the faith of the prisoner’s promise afterwards to pay for them. This in
Under all the circumstances, as charged in the second count in the indictment, and as proved on the trial, according to the statement of the evidence ; we feel satisfied the law will not sustain a future conviction, on the true facts of the case.
We therefore reverse the conviction, ■ and direct the prisoner to be discharged.
Aik. D. 1O3~ sec. 17.
Art 5, s. 17.
2 Hale’s P. C. 183.
Aik. D. 328, s.6--330, s18
3 Camp. 376
2 East P.C. 599.
4 Taunt.273
, b2 East C, L,