In re Payson

The opinion of the court was delivered by

"Valentine, J.:

This is an action of habeas corpus, brought in this court by Charles H. Payson against A. T. Shenneman, sheriff of Cowley county, charging the defendant with unlawfully and illegally restraining the plaintiff of his liberty. It appears from the application of the plaintiff and the return of the defendant (and the truth of the return is admitted by the plaintiff), that the plaintiff has been sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary by the district court of said Cowley county, and that the defendant holds the plaintiff in custody under such sentence.

*760The only question now presented to this court is, whether said sentence is void, or not. If it is void, the plaintiff is of course illegally restrained of his liberty; but if it is valid, then it is admitted that he is legally and rightfully restrained of his liberty. The question is not whether the sentence is irregular only, or voidable; it is not whether the sentence might not be set aside or reversed for error, if the case were brought to this court on appeal; but it is whether such sentence is absolutely void, under all circumstances, if attacked collaterally as well as if attacked directly. The plaintiff, of course, claims that the sentence is void; and he makes this claim upon the sole ground that the acts for which he was sentenced are not punishable under the laws of the state of Kansas.

The plaintiff was charged, tried, convicted and sentenced for wrongfully obtaining the signature of Lena McNeil to a certain deed of conveyance of real estate, under the following circumstances, to wit: The said Lena McNeil, desiring and intending to convey said real estate to her mother, Martha E. McNeil, requested the plaintiff to draft and prepare a deed for that purpose, and he, pretending to do so, wrongfully and fraudulently drafted a deed conveying the property to himself; and then, by false pretenses, obtained her signature to such deed, and by like false pretenses, obtained and retained the possession of the deed, ostensibly for the purpose of having it recorded for Lena McNeil, but really to have it recorded for himself.

The information states the facts much more fully than we have stated them.

' The statutes under which this prosecution was had read as. follows:

“Every person who, with intent to cheat or defraud another, shall, designedly, by means of any false token or writing, or by any other false pretense, obtain the signature of any person to any written instrument, or obtain from any person any money, personal property, right in action, or any other valuable thing or effects whatsoever, upon conviction thereof shall be punished in the same manner and to the same extent as for feloniously stealing the money, property or thing [so] obtained.” (Crimes Act, §94.)
*761“If any person steal or embezzle any will of real or personal property, or any deed or other instrument of writing, being or purporting to be the act of another, by which any right or interest in real or personal property shall be or purport to be assured, transferred or conveyed, or in any way changed or affected, shall be adjudged guilty of grand larceny, without reference to the value of the instrument so stolen or embezzled, and shall be punished by confinement and hard labor not exceeding five years, or in the county jail not less than six months.” (Crimes Act, §84; Comp. Laws of 1879, pp. 338, 339.)

The plaintiff claims that he was prosecuted and sentenced merely for obtaining a signature; that a signature cannot be stolen, and therefore that there is no punishment fixed for the supposed offense for which he was sentenced, and therefore that the sentence is void. He claims that that portion of § 94 of the crimes act which relates to obtaining a signature, is nugatory and worthless, and that the legislature committed a great and palpable blunder in enacting it and in attempting to create an offense without providing any punishment for such intended offense. These statutes, however, were borrowed from Missouri; they have been on our statute books for nearly twenty-five years; they have been enacted and reenacted by successive legislatures, and the able commission appointed by the justices of the supreme court in 1877, to revise the laws of the state, recommended their reenactment, substantially as they were, and almost verbatim. (Sections 161 and 88 of the chapter on public offenses of the Commissioners’ Report.) This is some evidence that no very great legislative blunder was committed.

The plaintiff, however, was not prosecuted and sentenced for merely obtaining a signature. It was for obtaining a signature to a “written instrument,” a “valuable thing,” and also for obtaining this written instrument, this valuable thing. And the law prescribes a punishment for stealing such things. The information sets forth the alleged offense in great detail, and no claim is made that the information is defective in any respect. Said § 94 does not pretend to make the mere obtaining of a signature an offense; nor does any other section *762of the statute do so. The obtaining of a signature to a blank piece of paper, if nothing further were done, would not constitute any offense. Nor would the obtaining of a signature to a deed, or to any other written instrument, constitute an offense, if such written instrument were never delivered. In order that the obtaining of a signature shall constitute an offense, it is necessary that the signature be attached to some written instrument of value, and that the written instrument itself be obtained along with the signature. (Fenton v. The People, 4 Hill, 126.) A signature cannot be obtained unless the written instrument to which it is attached is also obtained. The legislature evidently had no thought of a signature being obtained separate from a written instrument. They had the whole matter in contemplation when they enacted the law — the signature, and the written instrument — the signature, and the writing above it to make it valuable. Their language is, “obtain the signature of any person to any written instrument;” and a signature with the writing above it, to make it valuable, may be stolen. All that a deed is, is the signature with the writing above it to make it valuable. Indeed, neither the signature nor the writing would be of any value if they were separated. And both together would be of no value, unless obtained by the party to whom they were apparently executed, or for whom they were apparently designed, or, in other words, unless they were apparently delivered to the party to whom they were apparently executed. The statute .evidently has a broader meaning than the plaintiff is willing to give to it. If we should construe it as the plaintiff desires that we should, we would make the statute speak nonsense, which we should not do, provided it will bear any reasonable construction, which we think it will. We think that the construction given t© the statute by the district court is the most natural and reasonable.

We think the imprisonment of the plaintiff is legal, and he will therefore be remanded to the custody of the said sheriff of Cowley county.

All the Justices concurring.