People v. Cassou

148 P. 810, 27 Cal. App. 23, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 454
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 503.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 P. 810 (People v. Cassou) 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. Cassou, 148 P. 810, 27 Cal. App. 23, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 454 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

The defendant in this case, in an information filed in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco, was charged with the felonious obtaining of personal property by false pretenses. The defendant’s demurrer was allowed upon the ground that the information did not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense. A judgment of dismissal was thereupon entered, from which the people have appealed.

The information charged • the defendant "with having induced one G. F. Vella, by means of false pretenses, to make and deliver to the defendant the following promissory note:

“$600. San Francisco, Cal., May 4, 1912.
“One day after date, 1912, at 3 o’clock p. m. of that date (no grace) for value received in gold coin of the government of the United States, I promise to pay to the order of Bank of Italy in this city six hundred dollars, with interest from date at the rate of seven per cent per annum until paid, payable monthly, both principal and interest payable in like gold coin. (Signed) Basils Cassou.”

This note was indorsed by Vella, and following his signature as indorser appears the following:

“For value recived . . . hereby waive presentation, due protest, notice of protest and notice of nonpayment. (Signed) G. F. Vella.”

*25 The information alleged that the note was of the value of six hundred dollars in gold coin of the United States, and that it was the personal property of Vella.

Section 532 of the Penal Code defines the offense of obtaining money, property, etc., by false pretenses; and that section, in so far as it is pertinent to the facts of the present case, reads as follows: “Every person who knowingly and designedly, by any false or fraudulent representation or pretense, defrauds another person of . . . property, . . . whether real or personal, ... is punishable in the same manner and to the same extent as for the larceny of the . . . property so obtained.”

An evidence of debt is personal property. (Pen. Code, sec. 7, subd. 12.)

Admittedly a promissory note in the hands of the payee or any other person than the maker, is an evidence of debt, and, as sueh, is personal property which may be the subject-matter of the offense of obtaining property by false pretenses. (People v. Summers, 115 Mich. 537, [73 N. W. 819] ; People v. Skidmore, 123 Cal. 267, [55 Pac. 984]; People v. Reed, 70 Cal. 529, [11 Pac. 676].) While the information in the present case avers that Vella, the complaining witness, was induced by certain false pretenses to make and deliver to the defendant the promissory note set out in the information, nevertheless it is apparent from an inspection of the note itself that the defendant alone was the maker, and that Vella was merely an indorser. Therefore, in so far as ownership was concerned, Vella had no interest in the note, and when read and construed in its entirety it is apparent that the information charges the defendant with nothing more than procuring Vella’s indorsement of the note by false pretenses. That this was the purpose and intent of the information was admitted by the attorney-general upon the oral argument of the case here. Neither the note nor the indorsement thereon had any legal existence until delivered to and accepted by the payee. (Randolph on Commercial Paper, sec. 216, p. 397; Clark v. Sigourney, 17 Conn. 511; Dann v. Norris, 24 Conn. 332; Mott v. Smith, 2 Craneh, C. C. 33, [Fed. Cas. No. 9882]; Cook v. Litchfield, 9 N. Y. 279.) Consequently Vella’s indorsement of the note was not an evidence of debt while the note remained in the hands of the defendant.

*26 This being so, it is apparent upon the face of the information that the subject-matter of the alleged false pretenses, viz., Vella’s indorsement, was not property within the meaning of section 532 of the Penal Code.

The case of People v. Nesbitt, 102 Cal. 327, [36 Pac. 654], neither holds nor hints that a promissory note which has not passed from the hands of the maker, may be the basis of a charge of obtaining property by false pretenses. In that case the information charged that the complaining witness was induced by the false pretenses of the defendant to execute and deliver jointly with the defendant to the Bank of Chico as payee, a promissory note, and thereupon the bank paid to the defendant the sum called for in the same. The supreme court, in commenting upon the sufficiency of the indictment, stated in effect that in view of the complicated nature of the facts of the transaction out of which the charge of obtaining property by false pretenses arose, the alleged ambiguities and uncertainties of the information would have been avoided by “a direct allegation in the information charging the defendant with having defrauded Merry (the complainant) of his note, and then the statute defining the offense here charged would have been literally followed.” Nothing that the court said in the case last cited is inconsistent with the conclusion reached here. There the court evidently was dealing only ■with alleged uncertainties of the information and not with the sufficiency of the facts, and therefore it cannot be said that the case is authority for the proposition that the information would have been sufficient without an allegation that the note involved in the transaction had been delivered to and accepted by the payee.

The case of People v. Stone, 9 Wend. (N. Y.) 183, is strongly relied upon to support the people’s contention that it was not necessary for the information in the present case to allege that the note in question with Vella’s indorsement thereon had been actually negotiated. That case, in so far as the principal point there decided is concerned, has no application to the facts of the present case. There under a statute which made it a crime “to obtain the signature of any person to any written instrument,” the defendant was charged in an indictment containing three counts with obtaining the promissory note of one Filly, and his indorsement to three other promissory notes. The court in discussing objections to the indict *27 ment, said: “The first and second counts of the indictment expressly aver that Filly was charged as indorser upon the notes mentioned therein and which it is alleged he was induced to indorse by false pretenses of the defendant, and that he had been obliged to pay and had actually paid the same. Filly could not have been charged as an indorser unless the notes had been negotiated (italics are ours) ; and their payment by him, whoever was the holder at the time must have been for the use and benefit of the defendant for whose accommodation they were indorsed. The third count does not show that Filly ever paid the notes mentioned therein, or that Stone (the defendant) ever parted with them or put them in circulation, or that Filly ever suffered any inconvenience or loss in consequence of having signed them.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P. 810, 27 Cal. App. 23, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cassou-calctapp-1915.