Opinion by
Head, J.,It would be impracticable to attempt to consider in detail each one of the forty assignments of error. We shall therefore group them as they naturally group themselves about the few questions we think it necessary to briefly discuss.
The learned court below could not have quashed the *516indictment. It is entirely without defect apparent on its face. It clearly charges every essential ingredient of the misdemeanor defined and prohibited by Section 111 of the Crimes Act of 1860. It avers the defendant conceived the design of cheating and defrauding the firm or company of which the prosecutor was a member or officer. It alleges that, in pursuance of that unlawful intent, the defendant falsely and fraudulently represented the existence of certain facts, and that “by color and means of said false pretense and pretenses” the said defendant obtained from the firm of the prosecutor a promissory note “for the sum and of the value of five hundred and fifty-seven dollars and fifteen cents made by Young & Schmitt to the order of the Interstate Lumber Company, being then and there the property of the said Young & Schmitt, with intent to cheat and defraud, etc.” No comment is necessary to show that this indictment charged an offense.
Many of the assignments of error complained of the rulings Of the learned trial court admitting in evidence the several exhibits tending to prove the transaction complained of. The general ground of these objections and of the argument here advanced in support of them is, they did not tend to prove the particular offense, if any, charged in the indictment. The theory of the learned counsel for the defendant, upon which this entire branch of his cases rests, arises from these facts. The information was made before the magistrate on February 24, 1913. That officer, evidently by mistake, laid the past transaction, the history of which is fully recited, as having occurred on the same date on which he took the information. The pleader who drew the indictment, obviously with the information before him, laid the transaction as of the date stated in the information. The indictment was found by the grand jury March 12, 1913. Now upon the trial, the proof disclosed that although the information was made in February, 1913, the transaction, out of which the defendant’s alleged guilt arose, *517actually occurred about May 1, 1911. That was within the period of two years before the bill was found. The whole of the evidence disclosed there had been but a single transaction between the defendant and the prosecutor. The false representations of fact alleged to have been made by the former were truly and accurately detailed both in the information and the indictment. These fraudulent representations, with the designed and resultant consequence that the defendant obtained from the firm of the prosecutor a promissory negotiable note of the value of upwards of $500, constituted the gist of the offense charged. Neither the particular day on which the transaction occurred, nor the date of the promissory note whiqh was secured, was of the essence of the transaction. The defendant at no time made any application for a bill of particulars. The indictment did not purport to set forth either a copy of the note which had been fraudulently obtained or to state its substance “according to its tenor and effect.” In this respect the pleader contended himself with the statement that.the false pretense resulted in obtaining from the defendant a security of the value of $500 and upwards. As the transaction was but a single one; as it was truly and fairly recited both in the information and indictment, we are wholly unable to perceive how the defendant suffered any substantial injury because of the mistaken date in both information and indictment. There was therefore nothing to prevent the operation of the well-established general rule that upon the trial of a defendant for a misdemeanor, the Commonwealth may prove its commission at any time within the statutory period running back from the date when the bill was found. In Com. v. Powell, 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 370, this court, speaking by Beaver, J., said: “Time was not of the essence of the offense.” He then quotes with approval the following statement of the general rule in-the language of Sadler’s Crim. Proc. 320: “A variation in proof as to time is immaterial where time is not an es*518sential ingredient of the offense. It is not necessary, however, except where time enters into the nature of the offense, to prove the exact time alleged. Any other time may be shown on the trial, if it is prior to the finding of the indictment and within the period prescribed by the statute of limitations,” So again the same court, speaking by Smith, J., in Com. v. Nailor, 29 Pa. Superior Ct. 271 said: “It is not necessary, however, to prove the time as laid, except when time enters into the nature of the offense, or the date is to be proved by matter of record, as when perjury is charged to have been committed in a proceeding in a court of record. It is sufficient that the date laid is one on which the offense might have been committed, and that the offense, if committed on such date, is by law punishable at the time of finding the indictment. Thus the date laid must be prior to the day on which the indictment is found; it must be within the period fixed by the statute of limitations for the finding of the indictment; and, in the case of a statutory offense, it must be subsequent to the enactment of the statute.” We are of opinion, therefore, that the learned trial judge committed no error in receiving the various items of evidence which tended to establish the existence of the transaction averred in the indictment; nor in refusing those points proffered by the defendant’s learned counsel craving a binding direction in his favor because of the alleged fatal variance between the allegations and the proof. All of these assignments are overruled.
The defendant further seriously complains of the action of the learned trial judge in refusing to permit him to offer, by way of defense, evidence tending to establish that, at the time the prosecutor’s firm gave the note, it was indebted to the corporation of which the defendant was an officer, in a sum greater than the value of the note. It is to be remembered the issue on trial was between the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the defendant at the bar of a criminal court. It was in no sense the function of such a court in such a proceeding *519to ascertain the state of the accounts between the firms or corporations Young & Schmitt and the Interstate Lumber Company. To undertake to have done so would at once have introduced a number of collateral issues which that court had no jurisdiction to determine. Even if it be conceded that the firm of Young & Schmitt was indebted to the Interstate Lumber Company, that fact in no sense justified or excused the alleged criminal act of the defendant in obtaining from them money or valuable securities by false pretense. When he did the acts which the statute declares constitute that misdemeanor, he committed an offense against the sovereignty of the Commonwealth and could be properly indicted and punished therefor without regard to the state of the accounts between two private firms or corporations. If the prosecutor or his firm, by reason of the false pretense of the defendant, was induced to-give up its valuable property, it matters not to the State whether that property was converted to the personal use of the defendant or to that of some one else. The learned trial court of course had no right to inquire into the personal relations of the defendant with the corporation he was employed to serve. In what manner he manipulated its finances, we need not now know. It is significant that in the statement of the books of the lumber company, kept by or under the supervision of the defendant, which was offered in evidence and which purported to exhibit the account of Young & Schmitt with the lumber company, there does appear a credit in favor of the prosecutor’s firm of $557.15 as of the date when the note in the fraudulent transaction was discounted. But it also appears that such credit but balanced an invalid and groundless charge of the same, amount for the car of lumber which the prosecutor had ordered but which the lumber company had never bought, never delivered, and concerning which the false invoice and bill of lading were furnished by the defendant. Manifestly, if that be a correct statement of the books, the prosecutor’s firm *520received no credit at all for the proceeds of its note because, after such credit, balancing only the false charge, the account remained in fact as it had been before either item was entered. We are clearly of the opinion the learned trial judge was guilty of no error in refusing to permit the defendant to confuse the simple issue by an attempt to show the state of the accounts between the two companies so often named.
We can discover nothing else in the record of the trial that invites any special discussion and we deem it sufficient to say, after a careful examination of all of the assignments of error and the grounds upon which they rest, we are satisfied the case was properly tried and the judgment should not be disturbed.
The judgment is affirmed and the record is remitted to the court beiow with direction that the defendant appear therein to undergo such portion of the sentence imposed as had not been, performed when the order of supersedeas in this case was entered.