State v. Ward

Richardson, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The prisoner at the bar claims a new trial in this case, on the ground, that the conviction is wrong, because he-was convicted upon proof that he passed a counterfeited-bank bill, whereas, the charge laid in the indictment ¡satire passing of a counterfeited promissory note.

*531It is well settled, that for certain purposes a bank bill may be considered as a promissory note.

And in order to understand the real nature and force of the objection upon which, the prisoner relics, it is necessary to recur to the provisions of the statute relating1 to the uttering and passing of bank bills and promissory notes.

The fifteenth section of the statute enacts, that if any person shall utter and publish, as true, any counterfeited bank bill, purporting to be a bill issued by a bank established in any place within the United States, he shall be punished by solitary imprisonment not exceeding six months, and by confinement to hard labor for a term not less than two, nor more than five years.

And the eighteenth section of the statute enacts, that, if any person shall utter and publish, as true, any counterfeited promissory ifoíe-, he shall be punished by solitary imprisonment not exceeding six months, and by confinement to hard labor for a term not less than three, nor -more than seven years.

Now, as the forged instrument is laid in this indictment as a promissory note, if the prosecution can be sustained at all, it must be upon the eighteenth section of the statute. For, although the bill is set forth in the indictment, and appears to be in the form of a bank bill, yet, still, as it is not laid as a bank bill, in the indictment, it is very certain that the prosecution cannot be sustained upon the fifteenth section of the statute, 3 Chitty’s C. L., 1040—1042; 2 East’s C. L., 980—985; 3 Chitty’s C. L., 1048.

And the objection to the conviction is, that the fifteenth section of the statute, having expressly prescribed the punishment for passing counterfeited bills, purporting t© be bills of banks established within the United States, such bills cannot be considered as promissory notes within the meaning of the eighteenth section, by which a different punishment is prescribed, so that, in fact, as the *532prisoner contends, there was no evidence in this case that lie had committed the crime laid in this indictment.

We do not see any answer that can be given to this objection, and are of opinion that it must prevail.

if the punishment for passing counterfeit bank bills were the same as for passing counterfeited promissory notes, the passing of a counterfeited bank bill might well enough be laid, in the indictment, as a passing of a counterfeited promissory note. And such is the practise in England, where the passing of counterfeited bank bids, and the passing of counterfeited promissory notes are both capital felonies. 3 Chitty’s C. L., 1025—1032 and 1048; 2 East’s C. L., 876; Douglas, 287, The King v. Jones; 2 Taunton, 334, The King v. Holden; 1 New. R. 96, The King v. Palmer.

And, in Massachusetts, the passing of counterfeited bank bills, purporting to be bills of banks not. established within the commonwealth, may be laid in an indictment as a passing of counterfeited promissory notes, their statute, which prescribes the punishment for passing a counterfeited bank bill, not extending to such bills. 2 Pickering, 47, Commonwealth v. Carey.

But we find no adjudged cases that can give any countenance to the conviction in this case.

JVew trial granted.