Munsell v. People

222 P.2d 615, 122 Colo. 420, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 18, 1950
Docket16344
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 222 P.2d 615 (Munsell v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munsell v. People, 222 P.2d 615, 122 Colo. 420, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 263 (Colo. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the court.

Leon D. Munsell, alias L. Munsell, and Marjorie E. Munsell, alias Mrs. M. E. Munsell, were charged with, a violation of section 222, chapter 48, ’35 C.S.A., commonly-known as our confidence game statute, and also in the information Leon D. Munsell was charged with being “an habitual criminal” in four separate counts, under the provisions of chapter 114, page 310, Session Laws Colorado, 1945, section 555 (1), chapter 48, 1949 Cum. Supp., ’35 C.S.A., commonly designated as the habitual criminal act. Both were found guilty of a violation of the confidence game statute and sentenced to terms in the penitentiary. They are here seeking a reversal by writ of error.

We will hereinafter refer to Leon D. Munsell, alias L. Munsell, as Leon, and to Marjorie E. Munsell, alias Mrs. M. E. Munsell, as Marjorie. At the trial neither defendant was sworn and examined, and neither offered any evidence.

The undisputed evidence disclosed that Marjorie, late on Saturday morning, March 22, 1947, opened a joint checking account for herself and Leon by depositing twenty dollars in the Greeley National Bank. She took the signature card with her, stating that her purpose in so doing was to obtain the signature of Leon. At the same time, “she said she was having some money trans *422 ferred to the Greeley National Bank, and she wanted to open an account with $20, so that her account would be opened when the money came in.” In the afternoon of the samé day Leon entered the Gregory Clothing Company store at Greeley with the avowed purpose of purchasing a size 46 suit of clothing and introduced himself to the manager of the Gregory’company as a representative of a brewery, having in mind the establishment of a branch in Greeley. He stated that he and his wife, Marjorie, were temporarily residing in a cottage camp until they could find some other quarters or a house in Greeley, where it was their intention to remain and establish a residence. Leon also represented that he was a member of the Elks lodge and had been at the lodge room visiting with some of the members there; that he planned to attend an Elks convention then in session, and for that reason desired to purchase a new suit. His reason for not consummating the purchase of the suit was stated to be that his wife carried the check book and that the suit could not be bought without her consent. Later in the afternoon Leon and Marjorie appeared at the clothing store, and after some inquiries as to the suit, she rather reluctantly consented to its purchase, together with some other articles of merchandise. Marjorie wrote a check for the sum of $65.79, and in so doing casually shoved the checkbook over where the manager of the clothing store could see it, and the stub showing a balance in excess of $600. Subsequently and on the afternoon and evening of Saturday, March 22, 1947, similar representations were made to six other business men in Greeley by Leon or Marjorie, and, as a result thereof, other goods of the approximate value of $200 were obtained by issuing in payment therefor checks drawn on the Greeley National Bank.

There also was introduced in evidence a check drawn on the West Side National Bank of Yakima, Washington, in the sum of fifty dollars, made payable to the Park Church, a religious institution in Greeley, Colorado, the *423 check being signed by Leon and dated March 21, 1947, payment of which was refused.

One of the merchants who had received a check for $21.68, upon learning that the checking account of the defendants was $1.68 short, made a deposit of that amount to the credit of the account and cashed his check, leaving no balance therein. Payment of all other checks was refused.

In opening the joint account with the Greeley National Bank, Marjorie represented their residence as 1329 Fourth St., Greeley; on one of her checks her address is given as Route 85, Box 182, Greeley; on another check it is stated to be Hoover Motel Camp, Greeley. The check forming the basis of the charge in the information was number 38.

During the night of March 22, 1947, Leon cashed his check at a liquor store in Brush, Colorado, for $13.85, with part of the proceeds of which he purchased two bottles of whiskey. Sometime late in January, 1949, defendants were apprehended at Phoenix, Arizona, where they had assumed the name of Combs.

The undisputed evidence was that Leon was not the representative of a brewery; was not an Elk; was not contemplating the opening of a branch of the brewery in Greeley, and was not purposing to take up his residence there. The evidence further conclusively established the fact that the only money ever deposited by Leon or Marjorie in the Greeley National Bank was the twenty dollar deposit made sometime during the business hours of March 22, 1947, and that the notation on the stub of the checkbook indicating a balance of $600 in the Greeley National Bank was fictitious and false.

An officer testified that Leon admitted to him a former conviction of the crime of forgery, second degree, in the state of New York and that he had served his sentence in the Elmira State Reformatory; that he had been convicted of a felony in the state of California and was sentenced to the California State Prison at San *424 Quentin; that he was convicted of the crime of forgery-in the state of New York and served a sentence in the Auburn State Prison; also that he had been convicted of obtaining money under false pretenses in Connecticut and had served his sentence in the penitentiary of that state. The documents respecting three of these convictions lack the necessary proof to make the same admissible in evidence, and, although the trial court held evidence of one of the former convictions admissible, this, the trial court held, under the provisions of the 1945 amendment, supra, was insufficient upon which to impose an additional term in the penitentiary. If, in so holding, the trial court was in error, it was error committed in Leon’s favor, of which he cannot now successfully complain.

The court found that the “conduct [of defendants] was a fraudulent scheme to obtain the confidence of the officers and employees of the Gregory Clothing Company, and the representations and conduct by the defendants was co-ordinated by and between them to obtain and take advantage of the confidence thus obtained; that in all said acts and conduct, each defendant was accessory to the other; that the defendant, Leon D. Munsell, was not an Elk, and was not a representátive of the beer or brewing company, and the entire transaction and scheme, as further shown by many concurrent transactions in and about Greeley, was a studied plan and scheme to obtain the confidence of merchants and others to obtain money or property by -means of bogus checks, and a part of said scheme; in fact, a deposit of only twenty dollars had been made at the bank upon which the check involved was written, and a bank book and check book thus obtained; that the check given involved here in exhibit A [check for $65.79] was far in excess of the bank deposit; and especially so in view of many other similar checks dated and passed as of the same date; that said check exhibit A was at the time it was made and delivered spurious and sham and bogus *425

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Bluebook (online)
222 P.2d 615, 122 Colo. 420, 1950 Colo. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munsell-v-people-colo-1950.