People v. Dougherty

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the November term, 1905, of the Peoria circuit court, five indictments were returned against the plaintiff in error, Newton C. Dougherty, each charging the crime of forgery. Each indictment was based upon an alleged forged order for the payment of money, purporting to have been issued by the Peoria Board of School Inspectors, and each indictment set out in hcec verba the instrument upon which it was based, and charged in the various counts thereof that the plaintiff in error had forged the order or scrip, that he had forged as an endorsement thereon the name of the payee, and that he had uttered or passed the instrument. Each indictment was based upon a separate order, the only difference among them being in the amounts for which they were drawn and in the names of the payees. At the same term of court the plaintiff in error entered his plea of guilty to each of these indictments, upon which pleas there was entered one judgment in each case, and upon each judgment he was sentenced to the penitentiary under the Indeterminate Sentence act, the judgment and sentence being for a “term of imprisonment not to exceed the maximum nor less than the minimum term as. provided by law for the crime of which said defendant was convicted and sentenced.” He now brings the judgment of the circuit court in each of these cases here for review by writ of error, and as the questions raised in each case are identical they have been consolidated as one.

Plaintiff in error urges two grounds for the reversal of these judgments: First, that each indictment shows upon its face that the instrument upon which it is predicated is void, and therefore cannot be made the basis of an indictment for forgery; and second, that each indictment charges three separate and distinct felonies, varying in degree and in the punishment to be inflicted, in which one judgment cannot be entered and an indeterminate sentence passed upon a general plea of guilty to the whole indictment.

The basis of the first reason urged is, that in each case the order alleged to have been forged and passed was directed to the treasurer of the “Peoria Board of School Inspectors,” and was signed by order of the Peoria Board of School Inspectors, by N. C. Dougherty, secretary, and B. Meals, president, whereas the correct corporate name of the corporation, as created by statute, is “The Board of School Inspectors of the City of Peoria,” the contention being, that as there was no such corporation as the “Peoria Board of School Inspectors,” the instrument, on its face, was void and could not be made the basis of a charge of forgery. It is not indispensably necessary that the instrument forged be in due legal form. It is sufficient if the instrument, supposing it to have been genuine, might have been prejudicial. Had the Board of School Inspectors of the city of Peoria regularly ordered the payment of a valid claim against it and had issued its order in the form of the instrument here alleged to have been forged, -there can be no doubt of the liability of the board to pay the amount of the order, or of the right of the payee to enforce payment as against the sole claim that the order was not issued in the proper corporate name of the board. If, then, the board itself could issue a valid order in these terms, it is apparent that the false making of such an instrument constitutes the crime of forgery.

Plaintiff in error next contends that in each of these indictments he is charged with the crime of forging the instrument, with the crime of uttering and passing the instrument so forged, and with the crime of uttering and passing a fictitious instrument for the payment of money of a corporation, when, in fact, there was no such corporation in existence, each being a separate and distinct offense, varying in degree and in the punishment to be inflicted. There is no basis for the contention that plaintiff in error, by any of these indictments, was charged with the crime of uttering or passing a fictitious instrument. Each of the indictments is based upon section 105 of the Criminal Code, which defines the crime of forgery, and no count or counts of any of the indictments are based upon section 107 of the Criminal Code, which defines the crime of passing or uttering a fictitious instrument for the payment of money of some corporation when, in fact, no such corporation is in existence. This being trae, these records do not present the question of whether, under a plea of guilty to each and every count of an indictment charging separate and distinct felonies varying in the punishment to be inflicted, a judgment can be entered without specifying upon which count the same is based and the defendant sentenced to the penitentiary for a period not to exceed the maximum nor less than the minimum term as provided by law for the crime of which said defendant was convicted. The plaintiff in error is charged in each of these indictments with two separate and distinct offenses, namely, with that of forging an instrument and with passing the instrument so forged. The punishment for these two offenses is precisely the same. The charge of two different offenses growing out of the same transaction may be embraced in different counts of the same indictment (Lyons v. People, 68 Ill. 271; Parker v. People, 97 id. 32; Campbell v. People, 109 id. 565.) It is apparent on the face of each indictment that the several counts thereof relate to the same transaction, as in each count the instrument upon which the indictment is predicated is set out in hcec verba. Even if it were not apparent upon the face of each of these indictments that the several counts relate to the same transaction, in the absence of anything to show the contrary, it would be presumed that the charges contained in each count related to the same transaction. (West v. People, 137 Ill. 189; People v. Peters, 241 id. 273.) The forgery alleged in each of the indictments, if committed by plaintiff in error, was but preparatory to and formed a part of the crime of passing the forged instrument, and had he been tried instead of entering a plea of guilty he could have been convicted and sentenced upon each indictment for one offense, only. (Parker v. People, supra.) Upon a plea of guilty to each of the indictments the court properly entered one judgment in each case, and there is no uncertainty whatever as to the sentence passed as regards the minimum and maximum time of its duration.

The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.