State v. Jackson

Thomas, J.

I. , The indictment .in this- case is drawn under' section 3826, Revised Statutes, 1889, and it charges that defendants, George Height and Isaac . Levy, at the county of Clark, did' unlawfully and feloniously attempt to obtain from John Mantle the sum of $3,500, of the goods and chattels of said John Mantle, “by means and by use of a cheat, and a fraud and a trick and deception and false and fraudulent representation and false pretense and a confidence game,” with the felonious intent to cheat and defraud the said John Mantle.

We do not concur in the contention that this charge is not sufficiently definite and explicit to inform defendants of -.the nature and cause of the accusation, *588within the meaning of section 22 of our bill of rights. The charge is in compliance with the statute, and on the authority of State v. Morgan, ante, p. 202, we must hold it sufficient.

II. The court admitted evidence of another transaction, for the purpose of showing defendants’ intent.

The evidence tended to show that in September, 1891, the two men jointly indicted with defendant induced John Mantle to show them his farm in Clark county, with a view, on their part, of purchasing it; that while going around the farm in a wagon they came across defendant in a fence corner, who got up and said, “Hello, Tanks,” to which the two confederates replied by calling him “Texas,” all pretending, however, to be strangers to each other; defendant said he was hunting a sister, who had married a man by the name of Hamburg, in order to pay her her part of $17,000, which they had inherited from their father, at the same time opening a valise he had, and exhibiting five or six bunches of money, or what looked like money. Mantle said he knew Hamburg, and would show defendant where he lived. Defendant then said he had had bad luck lately; that the landlord where he had stopped had won $1,000 from him; the two confederates seemed to be much interested and inquired how he had lost the money; defendant pulled out four cards, with which all except Mantle played, and they pretended that the two confederates had won $3,500 from defendant; they then asked Mantle to play, and though objecting at first he was induced finally to turn a card or two, whereupon they claimed he had won $3,500, and defendant took out a roll of bills and commenced to count the money, laying a $20 bill in Mantle’s hand, but immediately took it back, remarking that if the latter could show he could have paid if he had lost he would then pay the $3,500; *589Mantle was asked if lie had $3,500, and he replied that he did not, but. could get that much, and was finally induced to go to a bank in Farmington, where he did business, in company with the two confederates, leaving defendant on the road; the banker gave Mantle a certificate that he could get $3,500 if necessary, and they returned to defendant; but this certificate was not satisfactory, and after some more parleying the parties separated.

The state introduced Stephen Trice, as a witness, who was permitted, over objections of defendant, to testify that in June, 1891, the same men approached him on his farm in Clinton county, Missouri, in the same manner they had Mantle. His story was similar in many respects. He got $3,500 in cash, however, and took it to the men on the road, where the game of cards was played, and where they obtained his money, but exactly how, he did not seem to know. He was frightened by their conduct and conversation; some of the men were masked, and after getting his money one of them threw a mask of some sort over his face, after which he became unconscious for awhile.

The general rule, that in a prosecution of this sort acts of a defendant similar to the one for which he is being tried are admissible for the purpose of showing the intent with which the act charged was done, is not denied. But it is earnestly insisted that the transaction detailed by Trice is not similar to the one detailed by Mantle, in that the former amounted to robbery, while the latter amounted to an attempt, if any crime at all, to obtain money by false pretenses and a confidence game.

While the witness Trice called the act in his case robbery, we do not think that defendant could have been convicted of that crime on Trice’s testimony. *590That act constituted the crime, defined by section 3826, supra,.which was composed of elements constituting a series of fraudulent and false declarations and acts, by which the confidence of the party was first obtained, and the party then fleeced; and the transactions with Trice and Mantle, however differing in detail, were similar in general outline; and, for the purpose of showing the intent of defendant and his confederates in their dealings with Mantle, the state hail a right to prove the transaction with Trice. State v. Myers, 82 Mo. 558; State v. Bayne, 88 Mo. 604; State v. Sarony, 95 Mo. 349.

At the time of the admission of this evidence, and afterwards by an instruction, the court specifically told the jury its object, and how far and for what purpose it should be considered by them in making up their verdict. , ,

III. The intent to cheat and defraud constitutes the main element in crimes of the character charged in this indictment, and the court erred in wholly omitting that element in the instructions to the jury. State v. Norton, 76 Mo. 180; State v. Myers, supra. And for this error the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.

Black, Barclay and Macearlane, JJ., concur. Sherwood, C. J.,'Brace and Gantt, JJ., dissent