The plaintiff in error was convicted in the District Court for a violation of section 218 of the Penal Code, in having altered a postal money order, issued at Macon, Ga., on December 26, 1914, for the sum of $1, payable to Charles A. Wells at Atlanta, Ga.; the alteration consisting of raising it from $1, as issued, to $21, by writing the figure “2” before the figure “1” on the face of the money order, and by writing the word “twenty” before the word “one” where it appeared on the face of the order and its coupon.
The errors assigned and argued with earnestness and ability by counsel assigned by the District Judge to defend the plaintiff in error are based upon the alleged admission of illegal evidence and upon the insufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction. The facts in the case, briefly stated, follow:
The evidence of the plaintiff in the court below tended to show that the defendant was in Macon on December 26, 1914, and that on the morning of that day an application was made to the postmaster at Macon for a money order in the sum of $1, payable to Charles A. Wells at Atlanta, by some one who signed the name of M. M. Clark to the application. The application itself was introduced in evidence by the plaintiff. The postmaster was unable to identify the person who applied for and to whom the money order was issued. An agent of the Southern Express Company at Macon identified the defendant as a person whom he saw in Macon on the morning of December 26, 1914, and again in Atlanta in his trial in the state court a few days thereafter. The evidence of the plaintiff next accounted for the defendant in Atlanta on the evening of December 26, 1914, between 5 and 9 o’clock, at the place of his arrest, where he attempted without success to pass a Southern Express money order on a merchant named Jacobs. After leaving Jacobs’ place of business, he was placed under arrest by a detective named Vickery, and, on request, he turned over to this officer the express money order, the letter and the envelope, under which it was inclosed, purporting to be addressed to the defendant at Atlanta and mailed from Macon at 11 o’clock in the morning of December 26, 1914, by M. M. Clark. He also turned over to the officer a
The defendant introduced evidence tending to show that on the night of December 26, 1914, after lip. m., a man passed a Southern Express money order for $23 on one Austern in Decatur street, Atlanta, representing himself to be Charles A. Wells, in payment of an overcoat purchased by him from Austern. The witness Austern testified that he saw the defendant a few days after this occurrence, and that the defendant was not the man who passed the Southern Express money order on him. The defendant, testifying in his own behalf, said that he met one M. M. Clark in Jacksonville on December 14, 1914, and was employed by him to help him take orders and put up signs with gold letters, a sample of which he exhibited in court; that he worked on a 50 per cent, commission basis in Waycross on December 21st and 22d, in Macon on December 23d and 24th, and took $43 in orders, of which his share was $21.50; and that during the same time a man named Charles A. Wells also worked for Clark in the same way, and earned, on the same basis,' during the same period, $23; that Wells and the defendant left Macon on Christmas Day at 1:30 p. m., and arrived in Atlanta at 5 p. m. the same day, leaving Clark in Macon, with ,a mutual understanding that Clark was to meet the defendant and Wells at the post office in Atlanta on the evening of December 26, 1914, at 6 p. m.; that Wells and the defendant were there at the appointed time, but Clark failed to meet them, and that they then each asked for mail at the general delivery window of the Atlanta post office, and each received a letter from Clark; that the defendant received the express money order for $21.50, which he presented afterwards to Jacobs for payment; that Wells received an express money order in his letter for
[1] The facts are stated with fullness, because of the earnest contention of the counsel for plaintiff in error, presented with ability to the court, that, conceding that all evidence that went to the jury was admissible, still there was not sufficient evidence to support the verdict of conviction. In the case of Crumpton v. United States, 138 U. S. 361, 362, 11 Sup. Ct. 355 (34 L. Ed. 958) the Supreme Court said:
“It is clear that the question, whether the verdict was contrary to the evidence, which is the first error assigned, is not one which can be considered in this court, if there were any evidence proper to go to the jury in support of the verdict.’”
And again, after setting out the evidence, the court said (138 U. S. 363, 11 Sup. Ct. 356 [34 L. Ed. 958]):
“There is no doubt that this testimony was sufficient to lay before the jury, and it would have been improper to direct a verdict for the defendant. The weight of this evidence, and the extent to which it was contradicted or explained away by witnesses on behalf of the defendant, were questions exclusively for the jury, and not reviewable upon writ of error. If the verdict were manifestly against the weight of the evidence, defendant was at liberty to move for a new trial upon that ground; but that the granting or refusing of such a motion is a matter of discretion is settled in Freeborn v. Smith, 2 Wall. 160 [17 L. Ed. 922]; Railway Co. v. Heck, 102 U. S. 120 [26 L. Ed. 58], Lancaster v. Collins, 115 U. S. 222 [6 Sup. Ct. 33, 29 L. Ed. 373], and many other cases in this court.”
Thfe question, therefore, is whether there is any evidence in the record in support of the verdict, and not whether the jury reached a right conclusion from it. The time at which this determination is to be made is at the conclusion of all the evidence — that of plaintiff and defendant.
[2] The alteration of the postal money order is established. The circumstances tending to connect defendant with” the alteration of the postal money order, as they appear in the government’s evidence, are: (1) The fact (denied, however, by defendant) of his presence in Macon
If the jury found that the entries in the memorandum book, introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, were in the handwriting of the-defendant; that the handwriting of such entries and that of the application for the postal money order were identical, the jury might well infer that the defendant wrote both the entries in the book and the application for the money order, and, finding that the handwriting of the money order was his, might well infer that the money order was issued to him, and, in that event, the inference might reasonably be indulged that the person to whom the postal money order was issued was the person who altered it. If the documents are to be considered as evidence in the case for the purpose of comparison of handwritings, then they constitute some evidence before the jury to connect the defendant with the raising and alteration of the postal money order.
These are the items of evidence in the plaintiff’s case. It is not worth while considering whether of themselves they are sufficient to connect defendant with the alteration, as they are properly to be considered along with the evidence introduced by the defendant. The defendant’s evidence consisted of his own testimony and that of the witness L. Austern. The latter adds no strength to the case of thé government, and weakens it to the extent that it has for its basis that the defendant and Wells were one person. The evidence of the defendant in his own behalf does establish a connection between the defendant and the postal money order. The defendant’s evidence is not a general denial of all knowledge of the existence of such a money order. He admits having seen it, as he says, in the post office at Atlanta in Wells’ possession and before it was altered. He denies, however, having any other or further connection with it. In weighing the effect of this denial is to be considered the- evidence tending to. show that it was recovered from a source that might have indicated to the jury that it continued in the defendant’s possession till after his arrest. His denial is also to be considered, in view of his explanation of how he came to see the postal money order, and the reasonableness of his story, which limited his connection to this momentary glance. That story was that he and Wells had worked for Clark in Macon and Waycross, and had preceded him to Atlanta, and had his promise to meet them there in person and pay them for the work they had done. He failed to so meet them. They immediately resorted to the general delivery, though there was no understanding with or advice from Clark to that effect, and each claims to have received separate letters from Clark, inclosing their wages in the form
[3] It is also to be considered that defendant testified that the letter to Wells inclosed a postal money order for $1, for the sending of which to Wells by Clark neither defendant nor Wells could rationally account then, and as to which the defendant offered no reasonable explanation on the trial. It is also to be considered that the two express company money orders, one of which was admittedly raised, were presented for payment at places other than the post office on which they were drawn and to persons theretofore unknown to the holders. It is also to be considered that the existence of Wells and Clark was supported only by the testimony of defendant, though two years had elapsed between the occurrence and the trial; also it is to be considered that the judge and jury in the court below had the advantage over this court of seeing the defendant and judging from his demeanor. If, as the plaintiff contended, there were no such persons ■as Wells and Clark, the inference is • irresistible that defendant altered the money order himself, since there would then have been no other concerned in it. If Wells and Clark were actual persons, then, in view of the record, it was certainly for the jury to say whether they and the defendant were confederates, or whether or not the defendant’s story of his innocent connection with them, and with the postal money order through them, was reasonable. If they concluded that he knowingly aided or assisted Wells or Clark, or both, to alter the money order, though the change was not made by him, he would be guilty of violating section 218, and could be held guilty under an indictment charging him as a principal, under section 332 of the Penal Code. We think, for the reasons assigned, that there is evidence in the record to support the verdict, and, that being true, within the rule laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of Crumpton v. United States, supra, we have no power to revise the verdict of the jury, upon this writ of error.
[4-6] The first assignment relating to the admission of evidence claimed to have been improper is based on the testimony of the Southern Express Company’s agent at Macon that he recollected seeing defendant at Macon in the early forenoon of December 26, 1914, “definitely, because a few - days after that I was called to Atlanta to testify against this man, Dean, for raising a Southern Express Company money order.” It is contended that the mention of the case against defendant in the state court was prejudicial to the defendant in this case. The witness, to fortify his identification of the defendant on trial with the person he saw in Macon on December 26, 1914, was, however, entitled to state on what other occasion thereafter, and before the trial in the court below, he had again seen the defendant. For this purpose it was proper for him to' testify that he again saw defendant in the state court when on trial there. If his language implied that Dean was guilty of the charge on which he was there tried, which seems doubtful, the objection was not made upon that ground, but upon the ground that ■the evidence was immaterial, and the court would doubtless have cor
[7] The second assignment, relating to matters of evidence, is based upon the court’s permitting the original application for the postal money order to be given in evidence. The prosecution being based on the alleged alteration of the money order, it was competent for the government to introduce the application, upon the authority of which it was issued, as part of the res gestse of the transaction, and without first proving that the application was in the handwriting of the defendant on trial.
[8-11] The third assignment of error is based on the admission in evidence of the memorandum book, which the defendant took from his pocket and surrendered to the arresting officer, together with the express company’s money order, at the time of his arrest. The book was submitted to the jury for two1 purposes: (1) As evidence tending to show that defendant was in Macon on December 26, 1914; and (2) for the purpose of forming a basis of comparison of the handwriting of the defendant with the handwriting on the application for the postal money order. The defendant objected to' it for all purposes, and asked the court to limit its effect, so as to exclude it as a basis of comparisons, and excepted to its admission generally and to the refusal of the court to so limit it.
The evidence with relation to it consists in the undisputed fact that defendant had it in his pocket when arrested; in the character of the book itself, and of the entries contained in it, and of the defendant’s denial that the book was his, or the entries in his handwriting, and of his explanation of how he came by it. The contention of the defendant is that the fact that the book was in his possession was evidence neither (1) that it was his, nor (2) that, if his, the entries were in his handwriting.
As to the first point, we think that possession in a case like this should be considered prima facie evidence of ownership, so as to shift the burden of showing the contrary to the defendant, found in possession. The general rule in civil cases is that possession is some evidence of ownership. In criminal cases, where the defendant’s evidence is not constitutionally available to the government, the need for and reason of the rule is more evident. If there is nothing on the face of the article that negatives the presumption of ownership, arising out of possession, we think the proper rule to. be that the jury is authorized, if they see fit, to infer ownership from the fact of possession unexplained. The explanation, when given, and its reasonableness, is a question for the jury, and does not affect the admissibility of the evidence, unless it shows without conflict that the ownership was elsewhere than in the possessor. The inference of ownership would be strengthened, when the article was surrendered voluntarily by the possessor and without denial of ownership, and when it was, like a pocketbook or a diary, of a kind ordinarily carried on the person of the owner, as was true in this case. We think the inference of ownership might have been drawn in this case from the possession of the memorandum book. If it was de
[12] The court below also permitted the jury to consider it as a basis of comparison as the defendant’s handwriting. This implied that it was proven to be in the defendant’s handwriting. The act of Congress approved February 26, 1913 (37 Stat. 683), provides that in any proceeding before a court or judicial officer of the United States, where the genuineness of the handwriting of any person may be involved, any admitted or proved handwriting of such person shall be competent evidence as a basis of comparison by witnesses, or by the jury, court, or officer conducting such proceedings, to prove or disprove such genuineness. There was no evidence of the identity of the writer of the entries, other than the character of the book and the fact that it came from the person of the defendant. The defendant contends that no inference of authorship can be indulged from these facts. It is certainly true that mere possession of a writing does not necessarily imply authorship. Letters addressed to the possessor would be inferred to be in the handwriting of another than the possessor. The room for such an inference depends upon the character of tire book or document containing the writing. When the book containing the entries is a personal memorandum book, such as tire owner customarily keeps in his own handwriting, such as a diary or an order book, or a memorandum of a personal itinerary, we think the character of the book and the custom of the owner of such a book to write the entries in it himself circumstances sufficient to go to a jury, and from which they may infer, if satisfied of it, that the owner or possessor of the book made the entries in it. The principle should apply only to. the class of documents or books which are customarily and of common knowledge kept personally by the owner. The original memorandum book, introduced in the court below, has been sent up to this court, and an inspection of-its contents and entries and of the book itself convinces us that it was of this class, and that the court did not err in refusing to restrict the purpose of its use by the jury, so as to exclude it as a basis of comparison of defendant’s handwriting.
The case of McCombs v. State, 109 Ga. 496, 34 S. E. 1021, concerns the finding of two letters on the accused, and it does not affirmatively appear from the report of the case that they were letters of such a nature as would have customarily been written by the possessor. The case of Van Sickle v. People, 29 Mich. 61, concerns a diary, and would seem to oppose the view we have taken. Every case must depend on its own facts, so far as those facts depend upon the nature of the document and the circumstances of its possession by the accused. Handwriting, admitted to be used as a basis of comparison under the act of Congress, is not required to be proven genuine in any other way than is any other document offered in evidence. Proof of genuineness, under the act of Congress, may arise from inference, providing the inference is convincing beyond a reasonable doubt, when the case is a criminal one. Direct evidence is a mode, but not the exclusive mode, of proof. Inference from the admitted facts that only one person had ac
[13] If the memorandum book, as claimed by defendant, was Clark’s, and in his handwriting, it was properly admitted, as there was evidence tending to show that Clark and the defendant were confederates, and that defendant may have knowingly assisted Clark to alter the money order, though Clark applied in person for it. The defendant could have been convicted as a principal under the indictment for so knowingly assisting. Penal Code, §§ 218 and 332. It was competent to offer the memorandum book as a basis of comparison with the handwriting of the application, whether the handwriting of each was that of Clark or that of the defendant.
[14] The last assignment, relating to the admission of evidence, is based upon the admission of the envelope, letter, and post office money order, on which the prosecution is based. The evidence as to them consists of the statement of the witness Vickery that they were turned over to him, according to his best recollection, by Brazelton, who, according to his best recollection, was in charge of the defendant, while he was conveyed to the station in the patrol wagon, on the morning after defendant’s arrest, and that of the defendant himself, who testified that he saw them for the first and last time in the possession of Wells at the Atlanta post office, on the evening of Saturday, December 26, 1914, at 6 p. m. The defendant, according to his own admission, had previous to his arrest seen the documents. His limitation of his connection with them to sight, while in the possession of another, may not have found credit with the jury. Wells was never arrested, was never in the patrol wagon, or in charge of Brazelton, and had no opportunity to confer possession of the documents on Brazelton. Possession of them, by the defendant’s testimony, once lay in a sense with Wells and defendant. The defendant had ample opportunity to place Brazel-ton in possession of them. Wells had none. The documents are traced to the possession of Brazelton, and shown to. have been produced on the trial from it. We think this justified the action of the court in admitting them in evidence.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the case is affirmed.