People v. Acuff

211 P.2d 17, 94 Cal. App. 2d 551, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1570
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1949
DocketCrim. 2610
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 211 P.2d 17 (People v. Acuff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Acuff, 211 P.2d 17, 94 Cal. App. 2d 551, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1570 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

By an information in four counts appellant was accused of forging two checks (Pen. Code, § 470) and uttering them (§476, id.). The information also alleged a prior conviction of issuing a fraudulent check in Wyoming, which was admitted. The jury returned a verdict of guilty on each count and appellant was sentenced to the state penitentiary, the sentences on the second, third and fourth counts to run concurrently with that of the first. A new trial was denied and this appeal was taken from that order as well as from the judgment of conviction.

The first count charged the forgery of a check for $82.20 on or about September 25, 1948, with intent to cheat and defraud one Ralph Beilis and the American Trust Company, Livermore office.

The second count charged the uttering of the same fictitious check. .

The third count charged the forgery of a check for $82.20 on or about October 5, 1948, with intent to cheat and defraud *554 one William Donel Wood and the American Trust Company, Livermore office.

The fourth count charged the uttering of the last-named fictitious check.

The check covered by the first and second counts is numbered 1014, dated 9-25-1948, drawn on Livermore office American Trust Company, payable to Jack L. Kiessig, for $82.20, signed with a signature difficult to decipher but which looks like “K. H. Geiger” or some similar name. It is endorsed in green ink “Jack L. Kiessig 637 E. 1st. Livermore, Calif.”

The check covered by the third and fourth counts is numbered 1015, dated 9-25-1948, drawn on the same bank, payable to the same payee, for $82.20, signed with the same kind of signature, looking, however, more like “K. H. Reigh” or “K. H. Reiger” than “K. H Geiger.” It is endorsed in pencil “Jack L. Kiessig 637 E. Livermore, Calif. Dr. 62669.” (The latter figures apparently are those of a driver’s license.)

The two checks are substantially identical on their faces except for their different numbers and except for the pencil writing “O. K. Wood” on the upper left-hand corner of 1015, and the differences in the handwriting of the signatures. Each is drawn on a printed form of check of “Livermore Office American Trust Company. ’ ’ Each has protectograph punches through the payee’s name. On each “The sum ... 82 Dols 20 cts” is stamped by a check-writing machine. On each in red rubber stamp appears the printing “A. A. A. Roofing Co.” above the penned signature, and near the lower left-hand corner “223 E. Railroad Ave. Livermore, Calif.,” and across the left-hand edge “A. A. A. Roofing Co. J. M. Applicator.” On the face of each in purple rubber stamp appears 1 ‘ Cannot locate account at Livermore Branch.”

A witness employed at the time by Ralph Beilis testified that appellant came into the Ralph Beilis store in Pittsburg, California, purchased merchandise coming to about $22 and tendered check 1014 in payment. It was submitted to Beilis who authorized its acceptance, and the difference between the sale price and $82.20 was given to appellant. The witness testified that appellant endorsed the check in his presence.

At Montgomery Ward & Company’s store in Pittsburg, a man identified as appellant sought to cash check 1015. It was submitted to the manager, William Donel Wood. Appellant when asked for some identification produced a temporary driver’s license in the name of Jack L. Kiessig. This was deemed sufficient, Wood O. K’d the check in pencil, and *555 appellant received the $82.20 without making any purchase. An employee testified that appellant endorsed it in her presence.

The manager of the Livermore bank testified that he had never heard of any A. A. A. Roofing Company, and knew nothing of a K. H. Reigh or K. H. Leigh in or about Livermore. He also testified that about a dozen checks similar to these two were presented to his bank but were refused payment because they had no such account. Appellant concedes in his brief that A. A. A. Roofing Company is a fictitious firm.

The following is quoted from the statement of facts in appellant’s brief: “On October 24th, 1948, a printing press was found in Amador County . . . and delivered to the Sheriff ... to be returned to the owner. With the printing press was found: a book of blank checks, a set of three rubber stamps, the same as those used to make the checks above mentioned, and twelve or thirteen uncashed checks, that were, except for the numbers, the same as those cashed in Pittsburg. I, the appellant, reported the loss of the printing press to Sheriff Lucot, and was arrested and held for investigation.”

Inspector Clawson of the Pittsburg Police Department went to Jackson with Ralph Beilis who identified appellant then in jail there as the man who had passed cheek 1014. With the articles already named there were also a “Paymaster” check-writer and protector, a typewriter, two fonts of type and other paraphernalia. A photograph of these articles spread out on a table after having been brought to Pittsburg, with appellant standing beside the table looking at them, is in evidence. Appellant admitted at Jackson that the paraphernalia was his, and in his opening statement to the jury he said: “You have heard him (the District Attorney) outline in detail the pieces of paraphernalia found, how it was acquired, and who it belonged to. That is an admitted fact . . .” Instead of 12 or 13 uncashed checks there were 19 in all, one batch of six and another of 13, numbered from 1018 to 1038, minus 1021 and 1032 missing, all dated 9-25-1948, each for $82.20; all of them were the same as to bank, payee, and rubber stamping; all protectographed and stamped by a check-writing machine and all signed with the same kind of signature, the initials “K. H.” being distinct and the surnames appearing to be either “Reigh” or “Leigh.” All 19, in short, were the same in general appearance and content as the two involved herein, except for numbering and the differences in the handwriting of the signatures.

*556 Appellant had had business dealings with Gorman Motor Company of Jackson and had written two letters to C. Gorman. Both letters, in the handwriting of appellant, were submitted by the prosecution to Dr. E. 0. Heinrich for examination and analysis in connection with the checks in question. There was also submitted to him as an exemplar a list of six names written by appellant in ink, for the purpose of subpoena for trial. Dr. Heinrich in testifying gave a comprehensive exposition of the writing habits and idiosyncrasies common to the two Gorman letters and the list of names used as exemplars and the checks, and expressed the opinion that the signatures on the checks showed the writer thereof had not attempted to imitate the signature of any person but had attempted to dissimilate the writer’s own handwriting. His opinion was that the person who wrote the two Gorman letters wrote the two checks in question. He was cross-examined by appellant exhaustively and without restriction.

The testimony of Beilis and Wood and of the employees of the Ralph Beilis Store and Montgomery Ward & Company, who identified appellant as the man who presented and endorsed the checks in their presence, plus the expert testimony of Dr. Heinrich, plus appellant’s admitted ownership of the paraphernalia, made out a strong and convincing case against him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 P.2d 17, 94 Cal. App. 2d 551, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-acuff-calctapp-1949.