other acts similar to those which form the basis of the offence charged for the purpose of proving that that offence is part of a fraudulent scheme or system and to rebut an anticipated defence that the acts constituting the offence charged, if done by the prisoner, were done innocently, accidentally, or inad- vertently, and not intentionally. Such evidence, having been rightly admitted, does not afterwards become irrelevant, merely because the only defence actually presented to the jury is a denial of the acts constituting the offence charged.
Decision of the Supreme Court of Western Australia reversed.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of Western Australia.
Walter James Finlayson was tried in the Court of Quarter Sessions at Bunbury on an indictment charging him on three counts with having stolen three several sums of money the pro- perty of His Majesty the King. He was found guilty and sentenced to three years imprisonment with hard labour.
From this conviction Finlayson appealed by leave to the Supreme Court, by whom the appeal was allowed, the conviction was quashed and a new trial was ordered.
From this decision the Crown by special leave appealed to the High Court.
The facts are sufficiently stated in the judgments hereunder. Mitchell K.C. (with him Ham), for the appellant. Under sec. 69 of the West Australian Criminal Code 1902 a fraudulent intent is a material ingredient of a charge of stealing. Evidence that on previous occasions the accused obtained money in the same way was admissible not only to rebut a possible defence of mistake or accident, but as showing a fraudulent intent, and that what he did was part of a fraudulent system: Makin v. Attorney- General for New South Wales 1, Director of Public Prosecu- tions v. Ball 2. The different acts were SO connected as to show that they were parts of one transaction R. v. Bond 3.
Duffy K.C. (with him C. Gavan Duffy), for the respondent. The evidence as to the offence actually charged, if true, shows that the respondent stole the cheques. The money he received for them from the bank was the money of the bank which the
1(1894) A.C., 57, at p. 65.
2(1911) A.C., 47, at pp. 56, 71.
3(1906) 2 K.B., 389.