State v. . McCloud , 151 N.C. 730 ( 1909 )


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  • This was an indictment under section 3432, Revisal.

    The jury returned the following special verdict: "The Clarke-Smith Company was a corporation, engaged in mercantile business at Belhaven. It issued aluminum checks to employees of the Roper Lumber Company, representing goods, and good for amount in goods named in check. Henry Boyd was a laborer for said Roper Lumber Company, and his name had been furnished by said Roper Lumber Company, as its laborer, to said Clarke-Smith Company. Defendant applied to said Clarke-Smith Company for a one-dollar check. The clerk asked the defendant his name. He told him it was Henry Boyd; thereupon the clerk furnished *Page 701 him a check good for one dollar and representing one dollar in goods. The clerk said he thought defendant's conduct suspicious. The next day the defendant came back and asked for another dollar check. Clerk refused, in consequence of the fact that Boyd had been in in the meantime. No goods were furnished on the check. Defendant's name was not Henry Boyd, and Boyd had not authorized him to call for his check. If, upon this finding, the court is of the opinion that defendant is guilty, the jury find him guilty. If the court is of the opinion that he is not guilty, we find him not guilty." Whereupon the court adjudged the defendant not guilty, and the solicitor appealed. After stating the case: The special verdict found in this case is defective, and the facts found by the jury are not sufficient to warrant any judgment thereon. In determining the guilt or (731) innocence of a defendant upon a special verdict, the court is confined to the facts found, and is not at liberty to infer anything not directly found. S. v. Custer, 65 N.C. 339; S. v. Hanner, 143 N.C. 632, and cases cited. The special verdict does not find the intent with which the defendant made the statements. "The intent to cheat and defraud the prosecutor is an essential ingredient in the crime of false pretense. The verdict should have found that fact distinctly, the one way or the other; either that the defendant made the false representation with intent to cheat, or that he made the statement under an honest conviction of its truth." S. v. Blue, 84 N.C. 807; S. v. Oakley, 103 N.C. 408. In the absence of such definite finding, the uniform practice is to grant a new trial. S. v. Bray, 89 N.C. 480; S. v. Blue, supra; S. v. Oakley, supra;S. v. Hanner, supra. Nor is there a finding showing under what agreement or arrangement the Clarke-Smith Company issued its aluminum checks to the laborers of the Roper Lumber Company. The aluminum check was the promise to pay of the Clarke-Smith Company, payable or redeemable in goods, as we interpret the verdict. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the judgment should be reversed, the special verdict set aside and a new trial had.

    Error. New trial.

    Cited: S. v. Colonial Club, 154 N.C. 185; S. v. Fenner, 166 N.C. 250;S. v. Allen, ibid., 267. *Page 702