People v. White
Before: Sanderson
Synopsis
Constitutionality of Section Seventy-Eight of the Act in ¡Relation to Chimes and Punishments.—The seventy-eighth section of the Act concerning crimes and punishments, providing for the punishment of counterfeiting money, etc., is not repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, or the laws of Congress made in pursuance thereof.
Indictment—Sufficiency of.—An indictment is sufficient in substance if it describes the offense charged in the language of the statute by which it is created or defined.
Section Seventy-Eight of the Statute in ¡Relation to Crimes and Punishments Construed.—To constitute the crime of knowingly having in possession counterfeiting tools, implements, etc., as created by the seventy-eighth section of the statute in relation to crimes and punishments, it is not only necessary to prove the known possession thereof by the defendant, but that such possession was with criminal intent.
Idem.—To constitute crime there must be a joint operation of act and criminal intent, or criminal negligence.
Construction of Statutes.—To determine the true interpretation of the terms of a doubtful or ambiguous section, it is proper to read it in connection with others in the same Act dealing with the same general subject.
Settlement of Bills of Exceptions in Criminal Cases.—The provisions of section four hundred and thirty-five of the Criminal Practice Act, prescribing the time within which bills of exceptions shall be tendered and settled are directory.
Sufficiency of Bills of Exceptions.—A bill of exceptions founded upon the allowance of a question stated, to which objection is made, which does not contain the answer thereto, is fatally defective.
Proof of Criminal Intent.—On the trial of a defendant for the crime of knowingly having in his possession counterfeiting tools and implements, it is competent, for the purpose of showing the criminal intent of such possession, for the people to prove that the defendant had counterfeit money also in his possession.
By the Court, Sanderson, J.: The point made on behalf of the appellant, to the effect that the seventy-eighth section of the statute in relation to crimes and punishments, under which the indictment was found, is unconstitutional, because it is repugnant to the -Constitution of the United States (Art. I, Sec. 8, Subs. 5 and 6) and the laws of Congress made in pursuance thereof (2 U. S.Statutes at Large, 404 ; 4 Id. 121) has been expressly decided by the Supreme Court of the United States adversely to the views advanced by counsel. (Fox v. The State of Ohio, 5 How. 410; Moore v. Illinois, 14 How. 13.) In the former case it was expressly held that the clause in the Federal Constitution which confers upon Congress the power to coin money and punish counterfeiting does not prevent the several States from also doing the latter.
The laws of Congress, to which we are referred, do not prohibit the States from passing laws on the subject, but on the contrary expressly provide that nothing therein contained shall be construed to deprive the State Courts of jurisdiction to punish for the same offenses under State laws. (2 U. S. Stat. at Large, 405, Sec. 4; 4 Id. 122, Sec. 26.)
To say that the indictment states no offense is to say that the statute defines none, for the former follows, and employs the precise language of the latter, which, as we have uniformly held, is sufficient to make a good indictment. The language of the statute and of the indictment being the same, the latter must be understood in the same sense as the former.
As to the interpretation to be .given to the statute, we agree with the learned counsel for the appellant. We do \\ not consider that it was the intention of the Legislature to declare that every person who knowingly has in his posses[187]sion any of the tools, implements or materials mentioned in the statute; or, in other words, any tools, implements or materials which are or may be used in counterfeiting, without any criminal intent, shall be deemed guilty of crime. To so hold would be to ignore one of the indispensable elements of crime. To constitute crime, in the nature of things and according to the declared will of the Legislature, there must be a joint operation of act and criminal intent, or criminal negligence. (Section 1 of the Act in relation to crimes and punishments.) If the mere making or knowingly having in possession paper and metals which are used in counterfeiting, without any intent to make such' use of them, be a crime, then is every maker of bank paper and every vendor or worker in gold, silver and such base metals as are, or may be used in counterfeiting, guilty of crime. Doubtless there are many tools and implements in use among artisans which are adapted to, or can be, and are made use of by counterfeiters in their business; if so, the same would be true of such artisans. The possession intended to be prohibited is a criminal one, or a possession with a criminal intent. It must be confessed that the language of the statute as found in section seventy-eight does not express this idea in specific terms, but we think it sufficiently appears. But aside from the language of that section the language of several other sections preceding and succeeding it, which define similar offenses, make criminal intent an element of the offense and for the purpose of determining the meaning of the seventy-eighth section they may be consulted. The chapter is devoted to the general subject of “ Forgery and Counterfeiting,” and the different sections are but specifications of the various acts in detail which fall under that head. The forging or counterfeiting of any of the various instruments or things mentioned in the seventy-third section, or the uttering and passing the same, must be done with a criminal intent, as there stated, in order to constitute the crime of forgery. Having in possession, knowingly, counterfeit coin is equally as mischievous, if not more
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