Edward C. Kuhl v. United States

322 F.2d 582, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 1963
Docket18688
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 322 F.2d 582 (Edward C. Kuhl v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward C. Kuhl v. United States, 322 F.2d 582, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4247 (9th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

BARNES, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from appellant’s conviction after a trial by jury on four counts alleging violation of federal counterfeiting laws — three substantive (18 U.S.C. § 474) 1 and one a conspiracy count (18 U.S.C. § 371).

*584 Count I charged appellant with making two aluminum plates for the impression of a twenty dollar bill; Count II with making three photographic negatives of a twenty dollar bill; Count III with possession of the plates; Count IV with possession of the negatives; and Count V with conspiring with codefendant Heisler to violate the said counterfeiting statute.

Practically all of the physical evidence against the two defendants was obtained by the police either (a) in a search of Heisler’s home on January 3, 1962, or (b) in a search of Kuhl’s automobile after his arrest on the same day.

Alameda County Sheriff’s officers, together with San Pablo and El Cerrito police, arrested defendant Heisler on two warrants; one, an Alameda County Sheriff’s Office warrant for violation of probation, and a second from the Oakland Police Department, charging forgery and felony check offenses. There had also been El Cerrito felony check “charges” lodged against Heisler, but no warrant for his arrest on those charges. 2

The search of the Heisler house at 1914 Pablo Vista, San Pablo, was thorough. It included his living room, bedrooms, garage, bureau drawers, closets and bookcases.

In the bookcase was discovered a photograph (Government’s Ex. 6) of defendant Kuhl and his brother taken on the Heisler premises at a New Year’s party two days earlier. Sergeant Armstrong, one of the arresting officers, recognized the picture as being that of Kuhl, whom he had “investigated” in October 1961. The investigation related to the storing of a duplicating machine on property owned by Kuhl.

Armstrong had kept the premises known as 2755 14th Avenue, San Pablo (where the Kuhls lived), under surveillance for a week prior to January 3, 1963, and had noted that an automobile was sometimes parked near that address; a 1950 blue two-door Pontiac automobile, license number EPN 809, that had (strangely) once been owned by Armstrong, Kuhl had been under investigation since October 1961 when in the night time Kuhl had moved a printing press into a storeroom on 1745 California Street in San Pablo. The suspicion of the police was that he was printing checks to be used in forgery operations.

On January 3, 1963, after taking Heisler to the police station, Armstrong started back to the Heisler residence, and when “in the area” of the Heisler residence (about two blocks away) saw the 1950 blue two-door Pontiac car being driven by Kuhl “away” from the Heisler residence area. Armstrong turned his car around, called for assistance, followed the Pontiac, and had another officer (Gaarsee) stop the Pontiac. Gaarsee talked to Kuhl (both seated in the police car) until Armstrong went back to the Heisler residence to verify that it was Kuhl who was in fact one of the persons in the picture found on Heisler’s premises. Armstrong looked again at the photograph and then ordered Kuhl arrested on suspicion of violation of California Penal Code, § 476, 3 and the car *585 impounded (Impounding Order, Pltff’s Ex. 11). It was released to the registered owner, Margaret Swazy, 4863 Appian Way, El Sobrante.

Kuhl’s residence had been under surveillance by the police since Kuhl had been present when Mr. Heisler had rented an apartment in El Sobrante. Heisler had been under surveillance because of the police’s suspicion that he was forging checks.

The search of the Heisler house, made before the Kuhl arrest, disclosed that one bedroom had been converted into a darkroom or photographic laboratory. (Gov.’s Ex. 1i.) The government’s Exhibits 1h and lg were photographs of aluminum plates found in the bureau drawer of the photographic room. (Gov.’s Exs. 2a and 2b were likewise photos of the plates.) Government’s Exhibit 1f was a photo of bottles of photographic solutions; Government’s Exhibit 1e, a photograph of developing equipment in the garage, and 1d was a photograph of graph paper manufactured by Addressograph-Multigraph, found on top of the dresser in the photographic room. Government’s Exhibit 1b was a photograph of solutions found in a closet. Government’s Exhibit 1a was the Multigraph machine found in the garage at 1914 Pablo Vista. The aluminum plates disclosed by Exhibits 1h, 1g, 2a and 2b were identified as photographic offset multilith plates of United States twenty dollar bills.

In addition to the foregoing, the government seized, in the search of the house, the following:

Government’s Exhibit 9: three photographic negatives, two of face and one of back of a Federal Reserve twenty dollar note (found in bureau drawer);

Government’s Exhibit 12: a box of clean-up sheets;

Government’s Exhibit 14: the camera (on table of room at 1914 Pablo Vista);

Government’s Exhibit 16: exposure frame (on top of bureau);

Government’s Exhibit 17: one of two packages of Multilith Master presensitized aluminum offset plates (found in room) ;

Government’s Exhibit 19: an aluminum plate (found in a drawer);

Government’s Exhibit 20a, b and c: three sheets of yellow graph paper (in the bureau);

Government’s Exhibit 21: tracing paper tablet (in the bureau holding yellow graph paper);

Government’s Exhibit 22; Ansco film holder (on the table); and

Government’s Exhibit 23: a twenty dollar note (genuine) found in an envelope with the Exhibit 9 negatives.

Seized from the Kuhl automobile were Government’s Exhibits 7 and 8, aluminum offset plates, which had been partially destroyed or burned, but still had portions of the back of a twenty dollar Federal Reserve note attached to the frame.

I

ERRORS ALLEGED

Appellant urges three errors:

(1) The denial of appellant’s pre-trial motion to suppress the evidence taken from his car.

(2) The denial of appellant’s pre-trial motion to suppress the evidence taken from the premises at 1914 Pablo Vista.

*586 (3) The denial of appellant’s motion made during the trial to suppress the evidence taken from his car.

We find no merit in any of the errors urged.

The short answer to the second alleged error — the pretrial motion to suppress the evidence taken from the premises at 1914 Pablo Vista, is that no such motion was ever made by appellant Kuhl.

A. The motion made by appellant’s counsel refers solely to “property seized by State and/or Federal authorities

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322 F.2d 582, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-c-kuhl-v-united-states-ca9-1963.