People v. Ballard

241 P. 596, 75 Cal. App. 29, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 130
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1244.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 241 P. 596 (People v. Ballard) 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. Ballard, 241 P. 596, 75 Cal. App. 29, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 130 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal hy the defendant from a judgment convicting him of a felony, to wit, obtaining money by false pretenses. The record presents the following facts, which appellant contends' are insufficient to sustain the verdict of guilty:

About April, 1922, defendant met the complaining witness, Johnsen, upon a ferry-boat traveling between San Francisco and Oakland. Johnsen was a deck-hand and defendant was a passenger on the boat. Defendant engaged Johnsen in conversation and inquired if he had any money. Johnsen said he had about $2,000 in the bank and was getting four per cent interest upon it. Defendant told him that he, Johnsen, was getting too old to work such long hours and said: “I can make it better for you than that, and if you come to my office for every dollar you invest, I guarantee next October you will have to work no more. Johnsen said he couldn’t come to defendant’s office because he had no leisure time. Defendant inquired where he lived and was given the address. The following day defendant called at Johnson’s home and said: “Mr. John-sen you come down; we are having a stockholders’ meeting today. Tou dig up a thousand dollars and by October *31 you will have $5 for every one you invest.” Johnsen replied that he could not come and defendant said: “Three o’clock is the stockholder’s’ meeting; got to have the money in by that time.” Johnsen, thereupon, went to the bank with defendant in defendant’s automobile and withdrew $1,000 and gave it to defendant. The next day Johnsen received through the mail a receipt reading as follows: “I hereby subscribe the sum of one thousand dollars for preliminary purposes to be used as such in the Lafayette Oil & Gas Company now organizing; such sum to participate in the development fund as an investment to share pro rata in all profits and dividends which may accrue hereafter from the actual organization of said corporation. Signed this 22nd day of April, 1922. H. A. Johnsen. I, Howard W. Ballard, have this day received of H. A. John-sen the sum of one thousand dollars to be used for the purposes stated above. Howard W. Ballard.”

About May 11, 1922, defendant again called at Johnson’s home and said he wanted $300 more, explaining: “We are taking up 300 acres more of land. All the rest of the stockholders are willing to do it and you must follow up. By October 1st, you will have lots of money. You will have five or six dollars to every one you invest.” Mrs. Johnsen, who was a woman over eighty years of age, hearing this conversation, expressed her doubt of the outcome of the investment and began to cry. Defendant said: “Don’t think that of me. By October 11, you will have lots of money and you will have a limousine and Harry will drive you around, Mrs. Johnsen.” Johnsen demurred, but finally yielded to defendant’s persuasion and went to the bank and withdrew $300, which he gave to defendant and for which he received a receipt similar to the one hereinbefore set forth. At this time defendant stated that the company was formed and they were having stockholders’ meetings and it was called the Lafayette Oil Company. Johnsen heard nothing more from defendant until about September 11th, when defendant called at Johnsen’s home about 6 or 7 o’clock in the morning. Johnsen testified that defendant said: “I come here to tell you we took out 300 more acres of land, adjoining land, and all the rest of the stockholders is in for it again and I want $300.” Johnsen said he didn’t have $300 to give to defendant and defend *32 ant told him to come to the city as soon as possible and bring the money. Johnsen and his wife came to defendant’s office in San Francisco and brought him $300 additional. Johnsen testified that this money was obtained from him to buy another 300 acres of land for the Lafayette Oil Company. It also appears that in October Johnsen went to the defendant’s office and defendant attempted to get some more money from him, but failed. Johnsen testified that he believed the representations made to him by defendant and, because of them, parted with his money.

Defendant’s own testimony is to the effect that no corporation known as the Lafayette Oil Company was ever formed and no additional land nor any land was ever purchased ; that when he secured the first $1,000 from Johnsen, he had a lease, individually, of some land in Contra Costa County upon which he hoped to find oil; that on October 24, 1922, together with two other persons as trustees, he executed a declaration of trust, by which said persons declared themselves trustees of a trust to be designated as the California Oil and Gas Company. This declaration of trust was never filed and was never operative. Defendant stated there was an “understanding” that he would turn -over his lease to these trustees and that this trust declaration with reference to the California Oil and Gas Company was to take the place of the incorporation of the Lafayette Oil Company. However, defendant admits that Johnsen was never consulted about this change nor given any interest in the California Oil and Gas Company and, indeed, this legal entity attempted to be created appears never to have had any assets at all. Defendant admits that he never executed any assignment or transfer of the lease which he held to the trustees, but was content to allow the matter to rest upon the assumption that “there is a little honor among men.” It also appears that this lease and its extensions had expired at the time of the execution of the declaration of trust, so there was nothing that .could be assigned.

Later, defendant closed his offices in San Francisco and when he was arrested he was in Los Angeles promoting another oil company known as the Lessors Oil Company. His general defense was that if he had not been arrested in July, 1923, he would have acquired some valuable land *33 and oil rights for the last-named company and would have added these to the Contra Costa County lease and would have given the subscribers to the stock of the proposed Lafayette Oil Company the benefit of an income realized from such sources.

It is not surprising that the jury refused to take this statement of future intentions as an evidence of good faith, in view of the many incidents appearing in the record which indicate bad faith and in view of the fact that the Contra Costa County lease had expired and that some practical legal obstacles would prevent subscribers to the stock of one company without assets from participating in the assets of a different company. Several other victims of defendant testified that they had given him money upon representations similar to those made to Johnsen. To some of these he gave receipts showing them to have subscribed to the stock of a corporation to be called the Contra Costa Oil Company. The testimony of all of these persons, taken together, gives a very clear picture of defendant’s methods and activities. The question of fraudulent intent was one for the jury. (People v. Boyd, 67 Cal. App. 292 [297 Pac. 873].)

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Related

People v. Rabe
261 P. 303 (California Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 P. 596, 75 Cal. App. 29, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ballard-calctapp-1925.