
    The People against R. B. Curling.
    On an indict-anent for forging a checi, drawn in the name of a co-partnership firm, on the President and Directors of the Manhattan Company, it was held that it was not necessary to set out the names of all the partners wha composed the copartnership, or the Banking Company.
    THE prisoner was convicted at a court of oyer terminer, in the city and county of New-Tork, in January, 1806, of forgery. The indictment contained four counts, on a forged check on the Manhattan Company, signed, “ Daniel Ludlow &? Co.” The first count charged the forgery to have ■ been committed with an intent to defraud Daniel Ludlow, and Daniel Ludlow, junior. The second count charged it to have been done with intent to defraud the President and Directors of the Manhattan Company. The fourth count charged the uttering of the check scienter, with intent to defraud Daniel Ludlow. On the return to the certiorari, directed to the court of oyer £5? terminer, the counsel for the prisoner, moved in arrest of judgment, on the following grounds:
    
      1. Because in the count charging the forgery with intent to defraud the drawers of the check, the name of Ludlow Dashwood was omitted; and in the count for uttering the same, with intent to defraud the drawers, the names of Daniel Ludlow, junior, and Ludlow Dashwood, were omitted.
    2. The counts charging the forgeiy, and uttering of the check, with intent to defraud the President and Directors of the Manhattan Company, are not sufficiently certain and descriptive of the persons intended to be defrauded.
    3. The act incorporating the Manhattan Company, is a private act, and was not spread upon the record, nor given in evidence ; and the court could not judicially take notice of any such company under that name.
    
      Piker, district attorney, for the people.
    
      T. A. Emmett & Blake, for the prisoner.
   Per curiam.

Though the forgery was of the copartnership name of Daniel Ludlow & Co. it was not necessary to state an intention to defraud every individual of the company : the omission, therefore, of the name of one of the partners in one count, and of two of them in another, is not fatal. By our statute, forgery is complete, if it be done with intent to defraud any person.” Though an intention, therefore, may have existed, to defraud every member of society, through whose hands the check passed, nothing more was required than that any one person, thus intended to be defrauded, should be designated. An acquittal, on such an indictment, will always be a bar to another prosecution for the same forgery, though laid with intent to injure some other person. A different rale, would often render it very difficult to draw a correct bill, from not knowing all the ¡part» ners of a house. This is a reasonable course, and safe for the prisoner. AH he can require is, that the nature of his crime, and the name of his accuser, be set forth with sufficient certainty. Such was the opinion of the twelve judges, in a case somewhat resembling this. What does the prisoner here complain of ? ' He does not deny that he committed the offence with the intent laid in the indictment, but because it was designed to have had a still more extensive operation, he expects to be dismissed with impunity. The reason he assigns for our favourable interposition, has nothing in it to excite much sympathy, and it would not be much to the honour of those who have devised the mode of proceeding in criminal cases, if we were bound to listen to it.

These two counts being good, it is unnecessary to dispose of any objections to the other, because, in criminal cases, one good count is sufficient to support a general verdict of guilty, however defective the others may be ; for the reason, no doubt, that the prisoner has been convicted of the -whole matter included in the good as well as bad counts. Grant v. Astle, Dougl. 730.

Motion denied, and judgment against the prisoner. 
      
      
        Lovell’s Case, 1 Leach, 282.
     