State v. Turley

Burgess, J.

At' the July term, 1897, of the Greeny county criminal court, defendant was convicted of obtaining certain personal property of the alleged value of $63 by fraud and fraudulent pretenses, from the Springfield Stove Works in said county, and his punishment fixed at two years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. From the judgment and sentence he appeals.

The material parts of the indictment are as follows: “The grand jurors of the State of Missouri, impaneled, sworn and charged to inquire within and for the body of Greene county, upon their oath present that one E. H. Turley, late of the county and State aforesaid, on or about the 9th day of September, 1896, at the county of Greene and State of Missouri, then and there contriving, designing and intending to cheat and defraud the Springfield Stove Works, a corporation duly organized and incorporated.under the laws of the State of Missouri, of goods, wares and merchandise, did apply to and request the said Springfield Stove Works to sell him, the said E. H. Turley, certain goods, wares and merchandise on credit, and to induce the said Springfield Stove Works, to sell him, the said E. H. Turley, said goods, wares and merchandise on credit, and to effect his said design and intent to cheat and defraud the said Springfield Stove Works, he, the said E. H. Turley, did then and there unlawfully, designedly, feloniously and-falsely represent, pretend and state to the said Springfield Stove Works, that he, the said E. H. Turley, was then and there the owner in his own name, above all exemptions and liabilities of a stock, of goods, wares and merchandise, a more particular' description *407to these grand jurors being unknown, in the town of Aseott, in the county of Douglas and in the State of Missouri, of the aggregate value of three thousand dollars. And the said Springfield Stove Works, believing said false pretenses and false representations, so made as aforesaid, by the said E. H. Turley, to be true, and being deceived thereby, was induced by reason thereof to then and there sell and deliver to the said E. H. Turley the following goods, wares and merchandise, to wit: , all being of the aggregate value of sixty-three dollars, of the goods and personal property of the said Springfield Stove Works, which the said E. H. Turley.agreed and promised to pay for; and that the said E. H. Turley, by means of the false pretenses and representations so made as aforesaid, unlawfully, feloniously and designedly did obtain and-receive of and from the said Springfield Stove Works the goods, wares and merchandise above mentioned, with the intent it, the said Springfield Stove Works, then and there to cheat and defraud the same, whereas, in truth and in fact, the said E. H. Turley was not then and there the owner in his own name, above all exemptions and liabilities, of a stock of goods, wares and merchandise in the town of Aseott, Douglas County, Missouri, of the aggregate value of three thousand dollars as so falsely represented by him, the said E. H. Turley, to the said Springfield Stove Works, as aforesaid, which he, the said E. H. Turley, then and there well knew, against the peace and dignity of the State.”

The facts are about as follows: At the time of the alleged offense defendant was doing a small retail mercantile business at Aseott, in Douglas county, Missouri. On the ninth day of September, 1896, he went to the office of the Springfield Stove Works, a corporation at Springfield, Missouri, to buy some goods to replenish his stock. He was met in the office of the company by *408an employee, by the name of Earnest Lovan, to whom he made his wants known. After making out a list of what he wanted, which amounted to about $63, he asked that he be given two or three months’ credit, and represented to Lovan that he was worth, over all exemptions and liabilities, about $3,700, find stated that he had a stock of .goods amounting to about ' $3,000, and that there were no mortgages against it. Lovan then asked defendant to make .out and sign a statement of his assets and liabilities at ‘ that time, which he did, showing that he had a stock of' goods on hands at an actual cost of $3,000; stock in transit, $50; accounts and notes considered good, $20; accounts and notes considered doubtful, none; cash on hand and in bank, $100; real estate not subject to exemption, $600; all other assets, $100; total assets, $3,870. He stated his liabilities in the following way: Owe for borrowed money secured, none; for borrowed money not secured, none; for merchandise not due, $100; merchandise past due, none; all other indebtedness, none; total liabilities, $100; net assets, $3,770. This statement was made and executed by the defendant. Upon these representations, and believing them tobe true, Lovan sold upon credit to the defendant a bill ’of goods to the amount stated in the indictment. The evidence shows that at the time the statement was made the defendant was not worth above all liabilities the sum of $3,770, and that the statement so made by him in order to secure the credit was false, and known to be. so at the time. To different other companies doing business in Springfield he stated that he had a stock of goods amounting to about $1,000. Mr. Sebree, an attorney for the Springfield Stove Works, a few days before the defendant was arrested, went to defendant’s store for the purpose of collecting the bill, and, as he states, found not over $40 or $50 worth of goods in the store. *409This statement, as made by Mr. Sebree, is not denied by defendant, but. he states that the day before Mr. Sebree visited his store he removed the greater bulk of his goods to another part of the county. The evidence tended to show that at the time of the commission of the alleged offense defendant did not have over $1,000 worth of goods on hand.

The indictment is' founded on section 3564, Revised' Statntes'1889, which provides that “every person who, with intent to cheat of defraud another, shall designedly, by any false token or writing, or by any false pretense........obtain from any person any money, personal property, right in action or other valuable thing or effects whatsoever.......shall be punished in the same manner and to the same extent as for feloniously stealing the money, property or thing so obtained.”

The first question presented for determination is with respect to the sufficiency of the indictment which is questioned upon several grounds.

The first is that it does not allege that the defendant feloniously intended to cheat and defraud the Springfield Stove’Works. The indictment alleged that the defendant, contriving, designing, and intending to cheat and defraud the’Springfield Stove Works, a corporation, .......did then and there unlawfully, ’ designedly, feloniously and falsely represent, pretend and state, etc. It then .proceeds to allege what the fraudulent representations, statements, and pretenses were, and in so doing the pleader followed the form laid down by Kelley in such cases in his work on Criminal Law and Practice, sec. 692, which, in so far as we are advised, has never been questioned. Substantially the same form is given in 1 McClain on Criminal Law, sec. 711. The gravamen of the offense was the feloniously obtaining the goods by false and fraudulent rep*410resentations and statements, and these facts the indictment sufficiently avers.

Another contention is that the indictment is invalid because it does not allege that the representations were made to any person or human being connected with said corporation, nor that the representations alleged to have been made by defendant were ever communicated to any officer, director or stockholder of said corporation, nor that said representations were relied on or believed by any officer, director or stockholder of said Springfield Stove Works. No such allegations were necessary, but it was sufficient if the same allegations were made that would be necessary in an indictment for the same kind of offense against a natural person. A corporation is “a body consisting of one or more persons established by law for certain specific purposes, with the capacity of succession (either perpetual or for a limited period) and other special privileges not possessed by individuals, yet acting in many respects as an individual.” 4 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 185. It can only speak and act through its board of directors or agents. Its directors are limited in number by its charter, but it may have any number, of agents. No one would contend that representations of the character with which defendant is charged with making, if made in writing and addressed to a corporation, that it would be necessary to allege that they were relied upon by some particular director or agent of the corporation, and the same rule applies when such statements and representations are verbal. The indictment sufficiently informed the defendant of the nature of the offense charged against him, and was in all respects, so far as we have been able to discover, free from objection.

The action of the court in admitting testimony in behalf of the State, which defendant contends was *411illegal and irrelevant, is complained of, but counsel for defendant has not favored us with even a suggestion of what evidence it was, except as hereinafter stated, that was improperly admitted, nor have -we been able to discover it after a careful examination of the record. Where counsel makes such a point it is his duty to point out the ruling complained of, and wherein he claims that error was committed, in order not only that we may have the benefit of the suggestion, but that we may not overlook the question.

Instructions numbered 1 and 5, given on the part of the State, are challenged upon the ground that .they were misleading. No other objection is urged against them. Nor is it suggested how or in what way they were misleading. They contained a correct interpretation of the law under the evidence adduced, as we understand it, and were in our opinion unobjectionable.

Another insistence is that the court erred in permitting G-. M. Sebree, a witness for the State, to testify over defendant’s objections to a conversation with defendant’s father on the twelfth day of October, 1896, with respect presumably to defendant’s stock of goods in the absence of defendant, but this contention is no’t borne out by the record, which fails to show that any such state of facts was testified to by this witness.

Evidence of other efforts upon the part of defendant made about the-same time to obtain goods from other merchants, upon the same character of statements and representations, was admissible for the purpose of showing the intent of the defendant, and to this purpose that kind of evidence was properly restricted by the State’s fifth instruction. So that defendant had no right to complain on that score. '

Lovan, to whom the alleged false statements and representations were made, and from whom, by reason *412thereof, the goods were obtained, was at the time the credit clerk and agent of the Springfield Stove Works, having authority to make such sales, and in such circumstances the obtaining the goods from him was but obtaining them from the corporation through him.

It was shown that Lovan was the credit clerk and agent of the Springfield Stove Works, and hence the false pretenses made to him were made to the corporation, and the property obtained from it through its authorized agent.

Finding no reversible error in the record, we affirm’ the judgment.

Gahtt, P. J., and Shebwood, J..,' concur.