Opinion
Argued June 9, 1926
Decided July 9, 1926
Appeal from the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Fourth Department.
Arthur V.D. Chamberlain for appellant.
Gordon H. Payne, District Attorney ( William H. Munson of counsel), for respondent.
The defendant was employed by the Lewis E. Sands Company as a general office assistant. She had care, in particular, of its transactions with the banks. The Sands Company, which was engaged in the business of selling beans, had an account with the Union Trust Company of Rochester, where it had a line of credit of $90,000. It borrowed money from the trust company through the discount of drafts drawn on its customers with bills of lading attached. The Sands Company became badly embarrassed early in 1924, and bankruptcy was even then discussed by the directors in the presence of the defendant. Business went on, however, for some months, though with accumulating difficulties. They accumulated so fast that fictitious collateral was fabricated in the effort to escape them. On September 5, 1924, the defendant filled out the bill of lading set forth in the indictment, signing thereto the names of Mahoney and Ellis, the New York Central agents at Albion, New York. She admits that she did this without authority from either of them. A draft for $2,800 with the fictitious bill of lading attached to it was presented to the trust company, and by it discounted in the belief that the security was genuine. Another draft for $2,400 with a bill of lading also forged was discounted at the same time. These were not, however, the first offenses. Nine other bills of lading had already been forged by the defendant and used in the same way. Bankruptcy followed on September 12, 1924.
When the crash came, the defendant went to San Antonio, Texas, where she met Lewis E. Sands, the president of the company. They remained there till word came that a warrant was out for their arrest. Upon this they separated, going in opposite directions, Sands to Florida, and the defendant to Huntington, Indiana. In Texas and in Indiana, she lived at times under the assumed names of "Grace Richards" and "Edna Grey." Before leaving Albion, she told the attorney for the Sands Company that she had forged a number of bills of lading. She made the same admission to the district attorney at Buffalo, on her return from Indiana, saying also that she had done this to keep the company going. There was little variance from these admissions in her testimony upon the trial. By her testimony as by her admissions, she had signed the names of the railroad's representatives without their knowledge or authority. She had done this, she protested, because her employers had instructed her accordingly, and what they told her she believed was right. Even so, she had made out the instruments and sent them to the trust company for the purpose of obtaining money, and this for an employer whose embarrassments were known. She was thirty-three years of age, and in those years had acquired not a little experience in business. She owned all the stock of the Brayton Bean Company, a subsidiary of the Sands Company. She also ran a roadhouse known as the Lone Star Inn. Despite this background of experience, her defense reduced itself to a denial that she had any intention to defraud. The jury refused to find her so ingenuous. A different verdict was hardly possible unless duty was to be ignored.
On this appeal the chief question grows out of the court's refusal of one of the requests to charge. The court had said in the body of the charge: "These other bills of lading appear to have been parts of similar transactions, reasonably connected in time and character with the one under consideration, and the purpose of the People in offering them and the purpose of receiving them was that it might be considered by you as tending to establish a motive or an intent or an absence of mistake." When the charge was ended, the defendant's counsel recurred to this subject with the following request: "I ask the court to charge the jury that before they are permitted to consider the nine other bills of lading offered in evidence here upon the question of intent, that they must first find that each one of those bills of lading was signed by her with the criminal intent to defraud." The Court: "I refuse to charge that. They must find that they were transactions of a similar nature to the one under consideration."
We think the ruling is correct, though there is plausible argument for error. The question to be determined was the fraudulent intent of the defendant in making and issuing a fictitious bill of lading. As bearing upon that intent, the jury were at liberty to consider the fact that this particular bill of lading was one among a series of fictitious bills, issued at different times, but in fulfillment of a common plan ( People v. Marrin, 205 N.Y. 275; People v. Katz, 209 N.Y. 311, 328; Mayer v. People, 80 N.Y. 364; People v. Shulman, 80 N.Y. 373; Wigmore, Evidence, § 302). Each one of them, when shown to be fictitious ( People v. Altman, 147 N.Y. 473), cast light upon the intent that was behind the making of every other. The intent was not something to be found separately for each as a preliminary fact, before any one of them could be considered in relation to the bill in controversy, but the mass, when viewed together, had a cumulative value in giving meaning to the parts. A defendant is indicted, let us say, for issuing a counterfeit bank bill. He protests that he issued it innocently. Evidence is offered that he issued another bill, also counterfeit, the day before ( People v. Marrin, supra, at p. 285; People v. Dolan, 186 N.Y. 4; People v. Shulman, supra; 1 Wigmore, Evidence, § 309). A finding that there was fraudulent intent in the earlier transaction does not precede the consideration of its significance in relation to the second. The two are to be viewed conjunctively, with all the sidelights cast by one upon the other. Repetition reduces the likelihood of mistake or mere coincidence. We miss the evidence of system when we ignore the succession, and concentrate our gaze upon the isolated acts (1 Wigmore, Evidence, §§ 302, 321, p. 637).
What is true of counterfeit money in the case supposed for illustration, is true, and for like reasons, in this case of fabricated documents. The ten forgeries collectively elucidate and characterize the purpose served by each. There is no analogy between such a case and People v. Altman ( 147 N.Y. 473), where the earlier acts to be compared were not shown to be wrongful. Here the acts are undisputed, and the only element of criminality that is doubtful is the state of mind accompanying them. On the trial the defendant took the position that she had not attempted to imitate the genuine signatures of the agents of the railroad. This circumstance was relied upon as significant, though not decisive, of innocent intention. An expert in handwriting, a witness for the People, examined the signatures, and found the marks of simulation. Here was a situation in which repetition was significant. Correspondences might be thought to be accidental or uncertain if discovered in a single instance. A jury could hardly hold them to be other than intentional if rediscovered in a dozen. Other phases of the defense bring out the same conclusion. The defendant took the position that in filling out the documents, she followed the orders of superiors, heedlessly and blindly. The People might legitimately contend that the multiplication of the forgeries and the scope of the fraudulent transactions gave opportunity for reflection and for foresight of the consequences. Illustration could be multiplied, but there is no need to elaborate the argument. We are unwilling to announce a rule that an earlier forgery may not even be considered in its bearing on a later one unless found at the outset to have been made with fraudulent intent. The first throws light upon the last, but equally is it true that the last throws light upon the first.
If error, however, were to be assumed, our duty would still be to disregard it as not affecting the result (Code Crim. Pro. § 542). Again and again the jury were instructed in the body of the charge that the defendant was not to be convicted unless found to have acted with fraudulent intent. If the defendant acted innocently, believing that what she did was right, the jury were to acquit her. The changes were rung upon this theme to such an extent that misunderstanding was impossible. Whatever the significance of documents of earlier date, the jury cannot have been doubtful that unless the particular document set forth in the indictment had been made with fraudulent intent, there must be a verdict of acquittal. In these circumstances, the attempted distinction in respect of quality of intention between this transaction and the others is merely abstract and unreal, without relation to the facts. The defendant would have us suppose that the jury believed the earlier fabrications to be innocent, and yet were swayed by what was innocent to a verdict that the final one was fraudulent. We do them wrong when we impute to them for the impeachment of their verdict a course of reasoning so tortuous.
A word should be said as to some rulings upon evidence. The trial judge allowed the defendant to testify that she had no intention to defraud and that she believed herself privileged to sign the station agents' names, though they had not authorized her to do so. He refused at one point to let her say why she believed this, and to state her employers' instructions with reference thereto. The error, if any, is unimportant, for the facts were brought out later. The defendant stated on her redirect examination that her instructions with reference to the signing of these names had come from her employers; that she supposed they would not act without authority; and that in this belief she signed.
Other rulings challenged in the defendant's brief are so plainly without error that discussion becomes needless.
The judgment should be affirmed.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.