People v. Bartnett

113 P. 879, 15 Cal. App. 89, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 10
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1910
DocketCrim. No. 199.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 113 P. 879 (People v. Bartnett) 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. Bartnett, 113 P. 879, 15 Cal. App. 89, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 10 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HALL, J.

The defendant was charged, under section 506 of the Penal Code, with embezzling certain bonds, alleged to *91 have been in his possession, care, custody and control as special administrator of the estate of Ellen M. Colton, deceased.

A verdict of guilty was rendered. Defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and judgment rendered upon the verdict, whereupon defendant appealed to this court from the judgment and order.

1. It is claimed that when the embezzlement, for which defendant was convicted, took place, the bonds were not in the possession, custody or control of defendant as special administrator of said estate, but had been, previously to such embezzlement, placed in the custody and care of the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, to be by it held under the orders and directions of the court. That for this reason the charge made in the indictment is not sustained by the evidence.

After careful consideration we are of the opinion that this contention of appellant must be sustained.

Section 4 of the act entitled “An Act authorizing certain corporations to act as executors, etc.” (Stats. 1891, p. 490, amended Stats. 1897, p. 424), provides that under certain circumstances the court may order the administrator to deposit with such corporation for safekeeping such portion or ■all of the personal assets of the estate as it shall deem proper ... ; “ and the property as deposited shall thereupon be held by said corporation under the orders and directions of said court.”

The court did on the fifth day of December, 1906, maké an order in the matter of the estate of Ellen M. Colton, deceased, whereby it “ordered that the said Walter J. Bartnett, the said special administrator of the estate of Ellen M. Colton, deceased, deposit all moneys and securities of said estate now in his hands or which may come into his hands hereafter, with the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, a California corporation . . . said moneys to be paid out only on the orders of this court, and said securities to be held by said trust company for safekeeping, under the orders and directions of this court.”

The securities had in fact been deposited with said corporation prior to this date and a receipt given therefor to said defendant, which was filed with said court. No new receipt *92 was given upon the making of the order, but the corporation was promptly informed of the order by defendant, and he thus relinquished to the corporation the custody and control that he theretofore had held over the Colton securities as special administrator. Thereafter the trust company held the custody and possession of the said securities under the orders and directions of the court, and defendant did not have the custody or control of said bonds as special administrator. The district attorney elected to try the defendant for an embezzlement that occurred May 13, 1907. The evidence of J. Dalzell Brown is to the effect that he caused certain of the Colton bonds to be taken from the trust company, of which he was manager, by another officer of the trust company, one Robertson, and sold on said date for the benefit of the trust company, or bank, as it was styled by the witnesses. It is not claimed that defendant himself. sold or disposed of the bonds in question. The theory of the prosecution was that he advised and encouraged Brown to do so. But Brown was not the administrator of the Colton estate, and the Colton bonds were not in his possession or control as administrator, but as the manager of the trust company. In selling the bonds Brown acted in violation of his trust as such manager. If defendant was guilty of aiding and abetting, advising and encouraging Brown to sell the bonds, defendant was guilty as a principal, with Brown, in the offense committed by Brown. But the offense committed by Brown was not embezzlement by an administrator. It was not the offense charged against defendant. The record presents a case of fatal variance between the proof and the allegations of the indictment, and for this reason the judgment and order must be reversed.

We do not see how this vice can be cured by a retrial, which probably makes it unimportant to notice other errors, of which there are disclosed a goodly number, some of which we shall nevertheless point out.

2. The indictment charges the embezzlement of a long list of securities. The district attorney, in his opening statement, disclosed that he expected to prove, in support of the charge, that the enumerated securities were embezzled in different parcels and at different times. In other words, he expected to prove several distinct embezzlements, any one of which, *93 if proved, would support the charge set forth in the indictment. At the close of this statement the defendant requested the court to direct the district attorney to elect which offense he would rely upon as the one for which the defendant would be tried. The request was denied and exception taken.

Evidence was given tending to prove an offense committed about two years before the date alleged in the indictment, whereupon the motion to compel the district attorney to elect was renewed and denied, and exception taken. Subsequently, however, the court did compel the district attorney to elect, and he elected to rely upon a sale of certain enumerated securities that occurred May 13, 1907.

The court should have compelled an election as early at least as the-close of the district attorney’s opening statement. (People v. Williams, 133 Cal. 166, [65 Pac. 323] ; People v. Castro, 133 Cal. 11, [65 Pac. 13]; People v. Hatch, 13 Cal. App. 521, [109 Pac. 1097].) Whether or not the error was cured by the subsequent direction and election need not be decided, as the judgment must be reversed for other reasons, and upon a retrial, if one be had, the court will doubtless follow the rule laid down in the cases above cited, and compel an election at the commencement of the trial.

3. In the indictment the defendant is charged with the embezzlement of a long list of securities. The evidence tended to show that various sales and hypothecations of different portions of the securities -had been made at different times, for the benefit of the trust company, by J. Dalzell Brown. In other words, a number of distinct appropriations constituting distinct and separate offenses had been proven. Especially evidence had been given of distinct and separate sales of Colton bonds on May 10, May 11 and May 13, 1907, by Brown or by his direction. It was the sale of May 13, 1907, that had been selected by the district attorney as the offense for which defendant was being tried. The theory of the prosecution was that defendant had aided and abetted, or had advised and encouraged, Brown to sell and dispose of said bonds, and in support of this theory evidence had been given by Brown that defendant in 1905 told Brown to use the Colton bonds for the benefit of the bank, and again about May 13, 1907, asked him why he did not use some of the Colton securities.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P. 879, 15 Cal. App. 89, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bartnett-calctapp-1910.