State v. Shaeffer

Henry, C. J.

The defendant was indicted by the grand jury in the criminal court of Jackson county at the May term, 1885. The following are the charges:

The first count charges that the defendant obtained a large amount of money from John I. Blair under false-pretenses, the false pretenses consisting of representations to Blair that he, the defendant, had arranged with the heirs of one Anthony to purchase of them for Blair their interest in a certain tract of land, lying in Jackson county, near Kansas City, and that Blair was to have the land at the lowest price at which it could be obtained, when in fact he purchased it at one price and represented to Blair that he had paid a large sum, and on the foregoing representation obtained from Blair more than the-defendant paid to Anthony’s heirs.

The second count charged that the defendant was. the agent of said Blair, and as such received into his. possession a large sum of money, the property of said Blair, which he feloniously converted to his own use. It is not necessary to give any other attention to these two-counts, the trial court having,’ by instruction, withdrawn from the jury all consideration of those counts, confining their inquiry to the charge in the third count, which is’ as follows:

*277“And the grand jurors aforesaid, upon their oaths aforesaid, do further say and present that Samuel 0. ShaefEer, at the county of Jackson, in the state of Missouri, on the-day of February, 1884, did unlawfully and feloniously obtain from one John I. Blair the sum of $7,650 of lawful money, of the value of $7,650 of goods, chattels, moneys and properties of said John I. Blair, by means and by use of a cheat, and a fraud, and a false and fraudulent representation, and false pretense, and false instrument, and false statement, with intent, him, the'said John I. Blair, then and there feloniously to cheat and defraud, contrary to the form of the statutes and against the peace and dignity of the state.”

On this count the jury found him guilty, and assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of eight years, and defendant has prosecuted his appeal.

The evidence for the state tended to prove that the defendant made representations to Blair to the effect that he had agreed to pay to the Anthony heirs for their interest in a tract of land near Kansas City $8,450, having-in fact purchased the same at the price of eight hundred dollars. The agreement between Blair and defendant, in relation to the interest of the Anthony heirs in the tract, was that Blair wouldplace the money to make that purchase to defendant’s credit in such bank at Kansas City as defendant might suggest by telegraph, or that he would pay defendant’s draft at sight, National Park Bank, New York. It appears that defendant telegraphed Blair, February 12, 1884, that he had drawn on him for $19,668.33, which sum included the $8,450 for the interest of the Anthony heirs. The draft was as follows:

*278“$19,668.33. Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 12, 1884.

“ At sight, pay to the order of myself, nineteen thousand, six hundred and sixty-eight and thirty-three hundreths dollars with exchange, value received, and charge to account of •

“ John I. Blaik,

“To Park National Bank, New York City.

“ S. C. Shaeeer.”

This was indorsed by Shaeffer to the Traders Bank of Kansas City, which sent it for collection to the United States National Bank, New York, which collected it and placed it to the credit of the Traders Bank, of Kansas City, which, after being informed of the payment of the draft in New York, paid the amount to Shaeffer at Kansas City.

On this state of facts the question arises where was the offence with which the defendant is charged committed % It is no crime to make use of false pretenses, unless by means of such pretenses the party malting them obtains money or property from another to which he had no right. And the crime is consummated where the money or property is received. Commonwealth v. Van Tuyl, 1 Met. (Ky.) 1; State v. House, 55 Ia. 466; Stewart v. Jessup, 51 Ind. 413. In the latter case the substantial fact was that one Kerr, relying upon false representations of Stewart, sold the latter twelve horses which Kerr had shipped to New York, where Stewart got possession of them. Stewart was arrested in Indiana on the charge of obtaining the horses by false pretenses, and on a preliminary examination before a justice of the peace, was adjudged guilty and required to give security in the sum of $3,000 for his appearance in the circuit court to answer the charge. Stewart, not having given the security, was committed to jail, and upon a writ of habeas coopus was brought before the circuit court of' Hamilton county, and on appeal to the Supreme Court *279of the state from a judgment of the circuit court against him, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment, holding that the crime was not committed in Indiana where the false representations were made, but in the state of New York, where the property was received. Numerous decisions of that court to the same effect were cited in the opinion. Norris v. State, 25 Ohio St. 217, is also a case analogous to the case at bar. The defendant was a resident of Clark county, and by fraudulent representations as to his solvency, contained in a letter, he induced the Akron Sewer Pipe company, located in Summit county* to ship him by rail to Clark county, a lot of sewer pipe. He was indicted in Clark county,' but the Supreme Court held that the crime was committed in Summit, and remarked that, “ The weight of authority is clearly that the railroad company was the agent of defendant for receiving the goods at Akron and carrying them to Springfield, and the delivery to it by the Sewer Pipe company was in legal contemplation a delivery of the goods to the defendant at Akron.”

So, in the People v. Sully, 5 Parker’s Crim. Rep. 142, defendant was indicted in Buffalo, Erie county, he having obtained by false pretenses in Buffalo, a check drawn on a bank in Batavia, Genesee county. The indictment was for obtaining the signature to the check, and it was held that he was properly indicted in the county, but the court said : “ It is not material where-the pretenses were made. The obtaining the signature or property by means of them, with intent to cheat and defraud, completes the crime and determines the place of trial.” And further remarked the court: “The prisoner could not have been convicted under the first count for obtaining the money through or by means of the check, for the money was obtained at Batavia without the territorial jurisdiction of the court.”

So, in State v. Wyckoff, 31 N. J. L. 68, the general proposition is asserted that, “A crime is to be tried in *280the place in which, the criminal act has been committed. It is not sufficient that part of such act shall have been done in such place, but it is the completed act alone which gives jurisdiction.”

In the State v. Dennis, 80 Mo. 594, the defendant was indicted for obtaining, by false pretenses, a lot of mules, and the question was, whether he had received the mules in Randolph county or in the city of St. Louis. In delivering the opinion of the court, Judge Norton said: “It is, however, earnestly insisted by counsel that if any offence was committed the evidence shows that it was committed in the city of St. Louis and not in Randolph comity; and that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained on the ground that the Moberly court of common pleas of Randolph county had no jurisdiction. If the premises assumed be well founded the legal conclusion drawn from it is undoubtedly correct.” The judgment was affirmed, the majority of the court holding that the mules were received by -defendant in Randolph county. I dissented, believing that the evidence established the reception of the mules in the city of St. Louis.

We entertain no doubt that the place where the money or goods, are obtained, without regard to where the representations were made, is the place where the party should be prosecuted.

Where did Blair pay this money ? Where did he lose his property in the money and his dominion over it? If he deposited it in the Park National Bank to the credit of Shaeffer that, was a payment in New York to Shaeffer. If he had money on deposit to his own credit and directed the bank to pay it on Shaeffer’s check or-draft, then, when so paid in New York, whether on Shaeffer’s check or draft, he then parted with his money. The United States National Bank was the agent of the Traders Bank, of Kansas City, which was unquestionably the agent of Shaeffer. Neither of the banks was in any *281sense the agent of Blair, but whether the United States National Bank is to be considered as the agent oí Shaeffer or the agent of the Traders Bank is wholly immaterial, since it is clear that it was not the agent of Blair or of the National Park Bank. After the National Park Bank paid the money to the United States National Bank, Blair’s obligation to pay the money was discharged, and if that bank had become insolvent -or failed to account for the proceeds of the check tc the Traders Bank,, Shaeffer could have had. no recourse upon Blair. The Traders Bank received the draft for ■collection for Shaeffer’s accommodation, and paid him the amount of the draft only on the assurance from its correspondent in New York that the Park Bank had paid the draft. That the Traders Bank then x>&id the amount of the draft to Shaeffer was not a payment by Blair. But the substance of this transaction was the collection of the money in New York from Blair and a disposition in Kansas City by Shaeffer of that money so collected in New York. If, instead of receiving the money, Shaeffer had received property in Kansas City from the Traders Bank instead of the money, the principle applicable would have been the same. The Traders Bank paid Shaeffer its money, not Blair’s. The United States National Bank held the money sent, not as Blair’s money, but really as Bhaeffer’s, though nominally as the money of the Traders Bank, and the endorsement of the draft to the Traders Bank by Shaeffer operated to transfer the proceeds of the draft to the Traders Bank, when paid by the Park National Bank to the United States National Bank. A merchant in New York who draws a draft on a customer in St. Louis which is paid by the latter to a bank in St. Louis to which the draft is sent for collection does not thereby pay the money in New York, but in St. Louis, .and that the New York merchant indorses it for collection to a bank in New York and receives the money on New York from that bank, after the latter has notice *282of the payment of the draft in St. Louis to its corres-' pondents there, does not make the payment by his customer to the bank in St. Louis a payment of the money to the New York merchant in New York. There are other important questions in this case which it is not thought necessary to determine, inasmuch as holding-that the crime was not committed in Jackson county, and that the criminal court of that county had no jurisdiction of the cause, the judgment must be reversed and the accused discharged.

There is, however, one instruction given by the court for the state xrpon which it is thought best to express our views. It is as follows :

“6. In law a party accused of crime is presumed to be innocent until the contrary is proven beyond a reasonable doubt. If, therefore, upon a consideration of all the evidence in this cause you entertain a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of defendant you will give him the benefit of such a doubt and find him not guilty. In applying the rule as to reasonable doubt you will be required to acquit if all the facts and circumstances proven can be reasonably reconciled with any theory other than that the defendant is guilty; or to express the same idea in another form, if all the facts and circumstances proven before you can be as reasonably reconciled with the theory that the defendant is innocent as with the theory that he is guilty, you must adopt the theory most favorable to the defendant, and return a verdict finding him not guilty. You will observe, however, that the doubt to authorize an acquittal on that ground alone must, as stated, be reasonable, and it must be also one fairly deducible from the evidence considered as a whole.”

The mere possibility that the defendant may be innocent will not authorize an acquittal. It declares very properly ‘ ‘ that one accused of crime is presumed to be innocent until the contrary is proven beyond a rea*283sonable doubt. If, therefore, upon a consideration of all the evidence in-this, case yon entertain a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the defendant, you will give him the benefit of such doubt and find him not guilty,” but then proceeds to explain what is meant by a reasonable doubt, as follows : “In applying the rule as to reasonable-doubt you will be required to acquit if all the facts and circumstances proven can be as reasonably reconciled with the theory that the defendant is innocent as with the theory that he is guilty; you must accept the theory most favorable to the defendant and render a verdict finding him not guilty.” This attempted explanation of the term “reasonable doubt” would eliminate it from the criminal code, and leave juries to find verdicts-in criminal cases upon the mere preponderance of the evidence. By that explanation the benefit of a reasonable doubt in criminal cases is no more than the advantage a defendant has in a civil case. The doctrine-expressed in this explanation is exactly that which is-applicable in a civil action, in which, if the facts proven can be reasonably reconciled with the theory that the defendant owes what he is sued for as that he does not, the defendant is entitled to a verdict. The plaintiff must make out his case and if the evidence is evenly balanced he cannot recover. But for the explanation of what was meant by reasonable doubt the instruction correctly declares the law, and why that should have been injected into the instruction is , inconceivable.

The instruction in regard to reasonable doubt, approved in State v. Nueslein, 25 Mo. 111, has been repeatedly sanctioned by this court. Juries understand it, the bench and bar are familiar with it, and it is not safe to depart from it in efforts to make clearer what is well understood. This case illustrates the danger of such experiments. Here the new matter introduced into the instruction vitiated it, and if for nothing else, *284tlie judgment would have been reversed for that error. As long as this court adheres to what it has ruled, especially in criminal cases, it is the better and safer practice for trial courts to be guided by its rulings.

The judgment is reversed and the prisoner discharged.

All concur.