Opinion
(December Term, 1835.)
Where an indictment charged in effect, that the defendant, a constable, falsely affirmed that a note for the payment of money was a forthcoming bond, and that by means of such falsehood, the defendant deceitfully prevailed on the prosecutor to execute a promissory note for the payment of a sum of money; it was held, that the charge was too vague and uncertain, in not stating how the result was produced by the falsehood practised.
THE defendant was convicted at Macon, on the last Circuit, before his Honor Judge MARTIN, upon the following indictment, to wit.
"The Jurors for the state, upon their oaths present, that Samuel Fitzgerald, late of, c., on the first day of April, in the year of, c., then and there being constable of the county aforesaid, by virtue of which office of constable he, the said Samuel Fitzgerald, had levied various executions on the property of one Purnel Wrathbone, in the county aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully pretend to the said Purnel Wrathbone, and one William Wrathbone, that a certain paper writing then and there presented by him the said Samuel Fitzgerald, to the said Purnel Wrathbone and William Wrathbone, was a bond for the delivery of property of him the said Purnel Wrathbone, theretofore levied on by him the said Samuel Fitzgerald, constable as aforesaid, by virtue of the executions aforesaid, on a certain day then and there mentioned by him, the said Samuel Fitzgerald; when in truth and in fact, the said paper writing then and there presented by him the said Samuel Fitzgerald to them, the said Purnel Wrathbone and William Wrathbone, was not a bond for the delivery of the property aforesaid, but a promissory note, for the sum of twenty-six dollars and thirty-seven and a half cents; by means of which said false affirmation, the said Samuel Fitzgerald did then and there unlawfully procure to be signed and sealed by the said Purnel Wrathbone and William Wrathbone, a promissory note under seal, to him, the said Samuel Fitzgerald, for the sum of twenty-six dollars and thirty-seven and a half cents; and did then and there procure the same to be delivered to him, the said Samuel Fitzgerald, by the said Purnel Wrathbone and William Wrathbone, to the great hindrance of public justice, to the evil example of all others in the like case offending, and against the peace and dignity of the state."
A motion in arrest of the judgment having been submitted and overruled, the defendant appealed.
No counsel appeared for the defendant.
The Attorney-General, for the state.
— The indictment in this case charges, that the defendant having, as a constable, levied certain executions on the property of the prosecutor, did falsely pretend, that a certain paper writing by him presented to the prosecutor and William Wrathbone, was a bond for the delivery of property of the prosecutor theretofore levied on; when in truth and in fact, the same was not a bond for the delivery of the said property, but a promissory note for the sum of twenty-six dollars and thirty-seven and a half cents; by means of which false affirmation, the defendant did unlawfully procure to be signed and sealed by the prosecutor and the said William, and to be delivered to him, the defendant, a promissory note under seal for the sum of twenty-six dollars and thirty-seven and a half cents, with intent to defraud the prosecutor and the said William. It has been contended, on the part of the state, that this indictment sufficiently charges the defendant with having procured from illiterate persons, the prosecutor and the said William, the execution of a deed to their prejudice, by reading the instrument to them in different words from those in which it was written, or by a false representation of its contents. It is not impossible, that such are the facts of the case, and if they be, and this indictment does not so set them forth, an arrest of the judgment in this case, will not be a bar to a prosecution in which the charge may correspond with the facts. In considering, however, whether in law, the conviction warrants the judgment which was rendered below, we are confined strictly to the record, and upon it, we can neither see the offence charged as has been supposed, nor indeed any offence charged with that certainty which is required in criminal prosecutions. We must understand legal terms in the indictment in their legal sense, unless by other sufficient and plain words, another meaning is impressed upon them. The instrument "presented" is not stated to have been prepared as and for a promissory note, to be executed by those to whom it was presented, but is alleged to be in fact and in truth, a promissory note. Now a promissory note is a written engagement promising the payment of money, and signed by the party promising. The instrument "pretended," is not stated to have been represented as one prepared for execution as a forthcoming bond, but to have been represented as a forthcoming bond for the property levied on. To represent it as a bond, is to represent it as a writing obligatory sealed and delivered by the obligors. There is no expression or phrase in the indictment from which we can perceive that these words "note" and "bond," are used in any other than their legal sense. It is not averred, that the defendant "procured" to be signed and sealed, the paper writing presented, but that he procured a note to be executed for the payment of the sum of twenty-six dollars and thirty-seven and a half cents. Nor is it averred that the parties who were so prevailed on to execute this note were illiterate persons, or executed a different instrument from that which they understood it to be. Then in legal construction the indictment must be regarded as charging that the defendant falsely affirmed, that a note for the payment of money was a forthcoming bond; and that by means of such falsehood, the defendant deceitfully prevailed on the prosecutor and the said William to execute a promissory note, or (as it) should have been termed) a bond, for the payment of a sum of money. It is not necessary to inquire whether by means of such a false affirmation, a cheat or fraud might not be practised under circumstances which would subject the offender to a criminal prosecution; but it seems to us essential in a case where there is no obvious connection between the result produced and the falsehood practised, that the facts should be set forth which do connect the consequence with the deceitful practice. It is a general rule in indictments, that "the special manner of the whole fact ought to be set forth with such certainty, that it may judicially appear to the Court, that the indictors have not gone upon insufficient premises." Hawkins, b. 2, ch. 55, sec. 57. Now it is impossible for us to see, upon such a vague and defective statement, how a false representation by the defendant of the nature of an instrument which he had and exhibited, or presented, could have induced any person to give the defendant a bond for the payment of money. It does not judicially appear to us that the indictors have not gone on insufficient premises. We are obliged, therefore, to declare the judgment, which has been rendered below, erroneous, and to reverse it.
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.