DocketNumber: No. 32965.
Citation Numbers: 159 So. 719, 181 La. 470
Judges: Land
Filed Date: 2/4/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In the first count of the indictment, defendant is charged with forging "the name of J.B. Hays as indorser to a check drawn on the Bank of Oak Ridge of Oak Ridge, Louisiana, dated September 23, 1930, payable to J.B. Hays and signed F.P. Montgomery Brown, for the sum of seventy five dollars."
In the second count, defendant is charged with uttering as true the check in question.
Defendant was tried by jury, found guilty as charged, and sentenced to serve a term of one year in the state penitentiary.
On appeal to this court, three bills of exceptions are presented for review.
This evidence was objected to by defendant on two grounds: First, that the original check was the best evidence; and, secondly, that the proper foundation had not been laid for parol proof.
These objections were overruled by the judge a quo for the reason that the state had proved that the check had been lost, and that it was not possible to produce same at the trial.
Article
Since the proper foundation was laid, as stated in the per curiam of the trial judge, parol proof of the contents of the check alleged to have been forged was admissible, under the article of the Code of Criminal Procedure above cited.
And also on the following grounds, to wit:
(a) That the indictment fails to set out the full tenor or even purport for the check charged to have been forged and uttered.
(b) That the indictment fails to allege that the check was lost or destroyed or was in the possession of the defendant.
(c) That the proper foundation was not laid to prove the forgery and uttering of the check.
Article 236 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of this state provides that: "In any indictment for forging, uttering, stealing, destroying, obtaining by false pretenses, or by swindling, embezzling, or concealing any instrument, it shall be sufficient to describe such instrument by any name or designation by which the same may be usually known, *Page 474 or by the purport thereof, without setting out any copy or facsimile thereof, or otherwise describing the same or the value thereof." See, also, article 233 of Code of Criminal Procedure.
The indictment in this case describes the instrument charged to have been forged as a "check," the name by which it is usually known; and by the purport thereof, by giving date, amount of check, by whom drawn, and name of payee, and charges that the forgery was of the name of the indorser or payee of the check.
The article of the Code of Criminal Procedure above cited has been substantially complied with.
As to the second ground of complaint, that the indictment fails to allege that the check was lost or destroyed or was in the possession of the defendant, it is not necessary in an indictment for forgery to allege loss of the instrument, and, in the absence of the instrument, only its substance need be charged. State v. Peterson,
The third ground of the motion for new trial, that the proper foundation was not laid to prove the forgery and uttering of the check, has already been passed upon for reasons given under bill of exception No. 1.
Besides, the defendant in this case is attempting to attack the indictment in a motion for a new trial. The objections urged against the indictment should have been taken by demurrer or motion to quash and disposed of before trial on the merits. Articles 284, 287, Code of Criminal Procedure. *Page 475
As we have already held that the indictment is sufficient and valid, in discussing bills of exception Nos. 1 and 2, the motion in arrest was properly overruled.
The conviction and sentence are affirmed.