People v. Bowman

142 P. 495, 24 Cal. App. 781, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 134
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1914
DocketCrim. No. 232.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 142 P. 495 (People v. Bowman) 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. Bowman, 142 P. 495, 24 Cal. App. 781, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 134 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

THE COURT.

A rehearing was granted that we might give consideration to an alleged special verdict that now appears in the corrected transcript but which was not before us at the former hearing. In relation to the said verdict the account presented by the record is as follows: “The jury returned into court. Judge Childs: Have you reached a verdict, gentlemen? Foreman: We have two verdicts and if the one is not legal we have another. The Court: You will pass it over. The foreman passed to the court a document which read as follows: ‘We the jury find the defendant guilty of obtaining the signature of N. Giacomini on a certain promissory note under false pretenses but with no intention to *784 defraud said N. Giacomini of the amount. Wm. MeAdoo, Foreman. ’ The Court: This does not find him guilty of anything. Foreman: Then we have this verdict: ‘We the jury find the defendant guilty of the crime charged and leave to the mercy of the court. ’ The jury was then polled. ’ ’

Appellant claims that the first of the foregoing constituted a special verdict within the contemplation of the following sections of the Penal Code: ‘ ‘ The jury when they are in doubt as to the legal effect of the facts proved, may find a special verdict.” (Sec. 1150.) “A special verdict is that by which the jury find the facts only, leaving the judgment to the court.” (Sec. 1152.) “The special verdict must be reduced to writing by the jury, or in their presence entered upon the minutes of the court, read to the jury and agreed to by them, before they are discharged.” (Sec. 1153.) “A special verdict need not be in any particular form, but is sufficient if it present intelligently the facts found by the jury.” (Sec. 1154.)

It is argued by appellant that “This verdict contained all of the facts necessary to be found in an action for obtaining money or property by false pretenses. In such an action two material facts must appear—namely: false and fraudulent representations or pretenses whereby one defrauds another person of money, labor or property and that there was an intent at the time to defraud. This verdict finds the fact that the defendant obtained the signature of N. Giacomini to a promissory note under false pretenses and it also further finds that the defendant had no intention to defraud N. Giacomini.”

The foregoing is not altogether accurate and contains only a partial truth, as an analysis of the information and of said verdict will clearly demonstrate. In the information it appears that by false representations the defendant induced said Giacomini to perform two separate acts,'—namely, to execute or sign the note and to deliver it to said Bowman. It is manifest that if either one of these was superinduced by said fraudulent pretenses and thus appellant was enabled to obtain possession of said note to the prejudice of Giacomini the offense would be complete. It might be true that the signature was obtained without fraud but if the delivery was caused by false representations a verdict of guilty might follow. Thus it appears that no judgment could be based upon *785 the mere finding of the jury that the signature was obtained without any intention to defraud, because it leaves undetermined the character of the other vital element, the delivery of possession of the note.

The latter part of section 1152 of the Penal Code adds a degree of certainty to what is implied in the first sentence of said section. It is that the special verdict “must present the conclusions of fact as established by the evidence . . . and these conclusions of fact must be so presented as that nothing remains to the court but to draw conclusions of law upon them.” If the finding of fact be consistent with either a verdict of guilty or of not guilty, as it was in this case, it is apparent that it does not constitute a special verdict as that term is used in the statute. In other words, if the finding does mot embrace all the material facts charged in the information it is not sufficient of itself to support any judgment and no conclusion of law can be by the court based thereupon.

If the fraud, as alleged in the information, related only to the act of securing the signature of Giacomini, or if it was averred that by means of these false and fraudulent statements defendant had obtained the note and the jury had found that he obtained it without any intention to defraud—■ in either of these contingencies, of course, the case would be different.

But the so-called special verdict is radically defective in another respect. The jury found—not that Bowman had no intention to defraud Giacomini, or that he did not knowingly make the false statements—but that he had no intention to defraud the latter “of the amount.” While the expression is not very clear, the jury probably meant that Bowman had no intention of defrauding Giacomini of the amount of money that the latter might be called upon to pay by reason of the note. But Bowman, at the time he secured the signature of Giacomini, might fully have intended to pay the note himself and to save Giacomini harmless and yet this would not affect a single element of the crime. If defendant made the said false representations knowingly and with the intention of obtaining said note and he did thereby obtain the note to the prejudice of Giacomini he committed the crime whatever might have been his intentions as to his repayment of the money. The fraudulent intent contemplated by section 532 *786 of the Penal Code is the intent, by means of the false representations, to secure the property which is sought by the party charged.

Manifestly no defense would be found in the claim that he fully intended at the time to make the aggrieved party whole, if a defendant, by means of false representations, knowingly secures the promissory note of another and thereby obtains credit to the prejudice of the maker.

In People v. Wieger, 100 Cal. 356, [34 Pac. 827], it is said: “In the assumption that it must be held that defendant did not intend to defraud the Sharpless firm, if he intended at the time to pay for the goods according to the contract of sale, and truly believed that he was able to do so, I think counsel is in error. Deception deliberately practiced for the purpose of gaining an unfair advantage of another is fraud. Goods obtained by such practice are obtained by fraud. One deprived of his property by such means is defrauded,” and among the cases cited by Judge Temple is Commonwealth v. Coe, 115 Mass.481, wherein it is said: “The intent to defraud is the intent by the use of such false means to induce another to part with his possession and confide it to defendant when he would not otherwise have done so. Neither the promise to pay, nor the intention to do so, will deprive the false and fraudulent act in obtaining it of its criminality. ’ ’

One is defrauded of his property “when he is induced to part with it by reason of the false or fraudulent pretenses and representations and the offense is complete when by means of such false pretenses the fraud thereby intended is consummated by obtaining possession of the property sought.” (People v. Bryant, 119 Cal. 597, [51 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 495, 24 Cal. App. 781, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bowman-calctapp-1914.