Foote v. People

Dykman, J.,

dissenting.

The indictment under which the defendant was convicted ■charges that he falsely pretended that a certain check drawn by Rim on a bank was good and genuine, and available for the payment of the sum mentioned in it, and that he kept an account at "the bank; that the prosecutor believed the false pretences, and was induced by them to deliver to the defendant certain personal property. The pretences are then negatived. The check is as follows :

“No. 148. “Franklin, Verrango Co., Pa., )
“June 16,1877. )
•“ First National Bank of Franklin :
“ Pay to J. Cronin, July 6, 1877, five hundred and ten dollars {$510). HENRY R. FOOTE.”

The defendant was convicted, and we must assume that the testimony of the prosecution was found true by the jury. The prose■cutor testified : “I was brought by a gentleman by the name of D’Arcy, and he told me that he had a customer; Mr. D’Arcy introduced me to him — then Col. Henry R. Foote; he said, says .he, ‘ I will buy your books, if you will take my check ; ’ I will, .say I, take your check, with the understanding if Mr. D’Arcy that informed me that Mr. Foote was a mighty rich man.” This last remark of the witness was not & statement of what he told the ■defendant, but of the reason why he took his check, and hence the remark by the court : “ You need not state that.” The witness continued : “I will take your check, says I; says I, I will take your check ; says he, it will be paid on the sixth day of July.” •Q. “He said it would be paid ? A. Yes ; on the sixth of July, ■says he ; said I, very well.” The court: “He said the money was in the bank ? A. Yes, sir.” On his cross-examination, this *221witness testified as follows : Q. “ What did he say at the time he gave you the check ? A. He said, I will give you a check upon, my bank, and you can come into my ofiice at any time and I will pay the check. Q. He said you can come into my office at anytime? Yes; that he was short of'money. Q. And he-would, pay the check ? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did he say as to the amount of money ? ■ I understand you to say that he said- he had not money enough to meet the check. ■ Q. Did you not say that on your direct examination ? A. I did. The court: The -question is whether; on your direct examination, you stated that CoL Foote had said that he was ■ afraid he had not money enough in the bank to pay the check ? A. That was the time he was giving me the check. Q. He did say. so ? A. Fie did.”

Here, then, we have • a case where a person having some books, to sell sought the defendant, after being told that he was a customer, and requested him to buy, and the defendant said, “ I will buy, if you will take my check.” This was agreed to, and he> made the purchase, and then drew his check, dated June sixteen,, payable July six, and delivered it, and said at the same time he* had not money enough in the bank to pay it, but that it would-be-, paid on the sixth day of July. The defendant testified that payment of the check was to be made at his office in Now York, and. it is evident that was so, for the prosecutor went there with it for that purpose the day before it was payable, and did not have it presented at the bank until he found he could 'not collect the: money from the defendant. There was no representation by the-defendant that the check was good, or that he had property, or that the money was in the bank. On the contrary, he said it was not. He said he owned some pictures, and that he was going to> build, and the uncontradicted testimony is that both these statements were true. There was no artifice or fraud or deceit used, to induce the sale or the acceptance of the check. On the contrary, he was sought out and requested to make the purchase, and. agreed to do so on condition that his check, payable twenty days: ahead, would be accepted. There is nothing to show any criminal intent, or to carry the case beyond the line of broken .promises and a failure to pay into the regions of criminality, or even fraud.. There was not one single false pretence shown; and, to constitute-*222this crime, some pretence must be used which is false, and used with intent to perpetrate a fraud.

The offence consists in intentionally and fraudulently inducing the owner to part with his goods, or other things of value,- either by a willful falsehood or by the offender’s assuming a character he does not sustain, or by representing himself to be in a situation which he knows he is not in.” (The People v. Haynes, 11 Wend., 558.) “ To constitute the offence, several things must concur. 'There must be an intent to cheat or defraud some person. For •that purpose, some false pretence must be designedly used, and •the fraud must be accomplished by means of the false pretence.” (The People v. Crissie, 4 Denio, 527.) The proof fails to bring •this case within these requirements.

In the case of The People v. Carl Lesser, recently decided in the Court of Appeals, the check was post dated, and the opinion .says: “If there had been no representation made, except by the delivery of the check, and the prosecution rested wholly on the .allegation that the money was in the bank, the point which the prisoner’s counsel seeks to raise would be good in the case, and the circumstance that the check was post dated would be very material. Under the circumstances, we think that the evidence was sufficient to justify a finding that the prisoner represented that the check was good, and the maker a man of substance, whilé he knew that it was worthless, and was a false token got up for the purpose of defrauding the prosecutor; ” and, on this last .ground, the conviction was affirmed. It cannot be claimed that there was any evidence to justify any such finding in this case. ‘There is not a single circumstance to show that there was any •device to defraud the prosecutor at all. The check given was a genuine one, and amounted only to an undertaking or promise that the money should be in bank to meet it when it became payable, and was accompanied with a declaration that it was not there. The essential .elements of a crime are wanting, and the -conviction should be reversed.

Present — Barnard, P. J., Gilbert and Dykman, JJ.

Conviction affirmed.