Roby v. State
Roby v. State
Opinion of the Court
Samuel I). Roby was tried and convicted in the district court for York county on an information charging him with having fraudulently and by misrepresentation obtained the signature of Peter Irrthum to a promissory note for $250.
The first point to which attention is directed by the petition in error and brief of counsel is the decision of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to a plea ip abatement in which it is alleged that there was another information for the same offense pending against the defendant at the time the present prosecution was initiated. The ruling was correct. In Commonwealth v. Drew, 57 Mass., 279, it is said, in an opinion by Chief Justice Shaw, that where it is discovered that an indictment is defective, “the proper course is for the grand jury to return a new indictment, avoiding the defects in the first. And,” he continues, “it is no good ground of abatement that the former has not been actually discontinued, when the latter is returned.” This decision is cited with approval in Bartley v. State, 53 Nebr., 310, 322, in which
The next contention to be noticed is that the evidence did not justify the jury in finding the defendant guilty. The testimony for the state is exceedingly weak and inconclusive with respect to three elements of the offense; and upon one essential point it is so very unsatisfactory and improbable that we feel constrained to reverse the sentence and award a new trial. After a careful reading of the bill of exceptions we are thoroughly persuaded that the defendant was not convicted because he had committed the crime charged in the information, but because he was guilty of a moral dereliction which resulted in a serious financial loss to the prosecuting witness, an old and ignorant man. The note in question was signed at the law office of Geo. B. France, Esq., in the city of York. About that there is no dispute. Irrthum testified that it was signed on December 16, 1899, while the defendant and four other witnesses testified that it was signed on November 20, 1899. These dates are important, for the reason that the representation which Irrthum says induced him to sign the nóte, was made, if at all, on the road between York and Benedict not earlier than November 25, 1899. The alleged misrepresentation was a statement by Roby that he owned 160 acres of good land on Lincoln creek, in York county. It is not contended that this statement had any immediate relation to the signing of the note, but Irrthum claims that it made an impression on him; that he remembered it and was influenced by it when, some two or three weeks later, he was asked to become surety for the defendant. If the note was really signed on November 20, it is obvious of course that the alleged statement afterwards made by Roby on the road to Benedict did not produce the mischief attributed to it. All the witnesses agree that de
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Samuel D. Roby v. State of Nebraska
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published