People v. Blumen

261 P. 1103, 87 Cal. App. 236, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 119
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 1927
DocketDocket No. 1400.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 261 P. 1103 (People v. Blumen) 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. Blumen, 261 P. 1103, 87 Cal. App. 236, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 119 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Appellants pleaded guilty to a charge of grand larceny and applied for probation, but before their applications were heard moved the court for leave to withdraw said pleas, and the motion was denied. An appeal was then taken from the order denying said motion and from the judgment of conviction.

The rule is well established that the granting or denying of permission to withdraw a plea of guilty and to substitute a plea of not guilty is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court, and that its action must he sustained unless an abuse of discretion clearly appears. (People v. Manriques, 188 Cal. 602 [20 A. L. R. 1441, 206 Pac. 63].) The circumstances shown by the record in sup *238 port of the trial court’s decision denying said motion may be stated as follows: Appellants are brothers. One of them had been employed in the foreign exchange department of a San Francisco bank. In February, 1926, they were indicted for the theft and embezzlement of the bank’s securities, consisting of foreign national bonds, approximating in value $100,000. Three separate indictments were returned against them. One contained three counts, charging them jointly with grand larceny, and the other two charged them singly, one with grand larceny and the other with embezzlement. At the time the indictments were found appellants were fugitives, but later were apprehended in London, England, and, pursuant to extradition proceedings, were returned to San Francisco for trial. They appeared in court with counsel for arraignment on August 13, 1926, and were given until August 23d to plead. Demurrers on general and special grounds were thereafter interposed and overruled ; and on October 20th pleas of not guilty were entered to each charge. On November 2'9th the causes came on for trial, at which time appellants, being represented by counsel, asked and were granted permission to withdraw their pleas of not guilty to the charge set forth in the second count of the joint indictment, and thereupon entered pleas of guilty thereto; whereupon and on motion of the district attorney the court dismissed the charges set forth in the first and third counts, and the two remaining indictments. On December 3d, which was the date set for the pronouncement of judgment, appellants applied for probation. The hearing of their applications was continued until January 3, 1927. At that time appellants filed a motion for. leave to withdraw their pleas of guilty and their applications for probation and to vacate the order dismissing the other charges. After a full hearing, during which much oral and documentary proof was received, appellants’ motion was on February 5, 1927, denied, and their applications for probation were continued for hearing until March 12'th, at which time said applications were also denied. Thereupon the court pronounced judgment, the sentence being imprisonment in the state prison.

At the commencement of the hearing of the motion counsel for appellants conceded in behalf of appellants (neither having testified at said hearing) that they understood the serious *239 nature of the charge when they pleaded guilty thereto, and that they were mentally competent and fully realized the nature and effect of such pleas. At the time the motion was filed, however, appellants also filed a verified petition setting forth certain alleged facts in support of the motion, and it was therein alleged that they were led to believe by statements made to them on the morning the trial was to have commenced, by one of the attorneys then representing them, and by statements previously made to them “by various other persons, ’ ’ that irrespective of the question of their guilt they would be granted probation if they would plead guilty to one of the charges against them; that they “did not intend to plead guilty to any charge except for the beliefs induced in their minds that thereby and thereupon . . . they would receive prompt and definite probation and be firmed of all further incarceration and difficulty for and in connection with any of the matters involved in any of the counts in said indictments”; but that since the making of said application for probation “it has developed that interested persons are opposing such application contrary to the belief induced in their minds and the assurances given them.” Appellants’ present counsel stated in reply to an inquiry made by the court that the “various other persons” referred to by appellants in their verified petition were Detective Proll of the San Francisco police department and one MacCubbin, a special investigator for the insurance carrier for the bank, both having served as agents for the state of California to bring appellants back from London to San Francisco; afterward the names of certain officers of the surety company were added to those mentioned.

All of the persons mentioned, however, including appellants’ former attorney, unqualifiedly denied ever having intimated to appellants or to either of them that they would be granted probation under any conditions. Said attorney declared that the suggestion that they plead guilty originated entirely with appellants and not with him; that when they first mentioned it he was opposed to their doing so, and that they were repeatedly advised by him that if they did plead guilty the matter of granting or refusing probation rested wholly with the court. Detective Proll testified that although in response to the various inquiries made by appellants on the return trip to San Francisco he endeavored *240 to explain the legal procedure necessary to be followed in applying for probation, he had never intimated that it was possible for them to obtain probation; MacCubbin testified substantially to the same effect, stating that he had made no statements whatever to appellants encouraging them to plead guilty, nor did he intimate that they would be released on probation if they did so plead; and the officers of the surety company filed affidavits likewise denying having made any such promises.

Appellants further averred in their verified petition that on the day their trial was to have commenced Leopold Blumen, as a result of jail confinement, “was sick and ill and has been continuously sick and ill and he was nervous and mentally and physically disturbed and unfit to make any determination, . . . that J. M. Blumen was also sick and' mentally and physically distressed and particularly worried and concerned over his brother’s illness ...” But it is evident from the shrewd manner in which the crimes were planned and executed, and the cleverness shown by appellants during their fight across America and through Europe in eluding the arresting officers and disposing of the stolen securities that they are persons of keen intelligence; and,- therefore, it may be fairly inferred that the condition of mind above described in which they claimed to have-found themselves after being arrested and returned to San Francisco for trial was nothing more serious than would be expected to result naturally from a realization of the grave consequences with which they were confronted after having committed a theft involving $100,000 worth of property.

Furthermore, in view of the evidence adduced at the hearing, the trial court was fully justified in believing that there was no reasonable doubt of appellants’ guilt.

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 1103, 87 Cal. App. 236, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-blumen-calctapp-1927.