People v. Coffelt

35 P.2d 374, 140 Cal. App. 444, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 409
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 1934
DocketCrim. No. 1787
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 P.2d 374 (People v. Coffelt) 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. Coffelt, 35 P.2d 374, 140 Cal. App. 444, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 409 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

Defendants V. L. Coffelt and G. R. Searl were jointly indicted, tried and convicted on the charge of grand theft. Defendant Searl has not appealed, but defendant Coffelt has appealed from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The charge was tried upon the theory that a conspiracy existed between the defendants for the purpose of obtaining money and property from the public in exchange lor stock of the Lusitania Corporation upon false and fraudulent representations and that the property of the complaining witness, Mrs. Clara M. Thornton, was unlawfully taken in pursuance of such conspiracy. The transcript is very voluminous, containing almost 2,000 pages, and it appears that over' 150 exhibits were offered at the trial. We believe, however, that the essential facts for the purposes of this opinion may be briefly stated.

Mrs. Thornton owned a piece of land in Concord consisting of about three acres. She had authorized her agent Adams to sell this property. Adams was approached by defendants with a proposition for the purchase thereof. After certain negotiations, in which the purchase price of $3,000 was practically agreed upon as a basis for the deal, Mrs. Thornton finally exchanged her property for the sum of $500 and 125 shares of the preferred stock of the Lusitania Corporation. . Mrs. Thornton previously knew nothing of said corporation and relied upon written and [446]*446oral statements given and made to her through her agent. Among the oral representations made hy defendant Searl to said agent and communicated by him to Mrs. Thornton were the following: “That they had the Lusitania building in which they were . . . ; that they also owned the Pitts-burg Building and Loan Association and that they owned the Victory Mutual Life Insurance Company and that they had the office of the Pittsburg Building and Loan Company at Pittsburg as a part .of their assets”; that “the income from the Victory Mutual was approximately a thousand dollars a month”; “that the Lusitania building had a very good class of tenants and they were paying good rental prices and the property was considered a very valuable piece of property”; that the University of California was “one of their tenants occupying a group of offices there in that building”; that the “Lusitania Company was taking in quite large amounts of money” and “that it was a good, profitable concern”. These and other representations which were made for the purpose of inducing Mrs. Thornton to part with her property were shown to be false and fraudulent.

As above stated, the oral representations in the Thornton transaction were made by defendant Searl. We do not believe that appellant seriously questions the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction of his co-defendant Searl, but appellant does contend that there is no evidence connecting him with the crime charged. In our opinion this contention is without merit. There- is abundant indirect evidence in the record to sustain the implied finding that an unlawful conspiracy existed between appellant and his co-defendant Searl and that the representations made by defendant Searl in the Thornton transaction were made pursuant to and in furtherance of the objects of such conspiracy. It may be here noted that the jury was fully and fairly instructed on the subject of conspiracy and that no. exception is taken upon this appeal to the giving of any of said instructions.

We will summarize briefly some of the evidence relied upon to establish the conspiracy between the defendants Searl and Cofllelt. Coffelt acquired for a nominal sum the charter of an inactive assessment mutual life insurance association known as the Victory Mutual Life Insurance [447]*447Association. In promoting this venture he conceived the idea of operating a building and loan association in conjunction therewith in order that the dues and assessments of the members of the life insurance association might be deducted from said members’ deposits in the building and loan association. Coifelt met with Searl and after the lapse of some time they finally acquired through certain fictitious transactions the charter of a practically dormant building and loan association known as the Pittsburg Building and Loan Association. Their scheme contemplated the incorporation of a holding company to be known as the Lusitania Corporation and the sale of the stock thereof. Said corporation was organized by defendants in Nevada and after considerable effort involving false representations by defendants to the commissioner of corporations of this state, they ultimately obtained a permit to sell said stock. Defendants then launched upon an intensive sales campaign with ■ defendant Coffelt acting as sales manager. This campaign was directed largely to selling the stock to the Portuguese people in Alameda County and at the same time a concerted effort was made to obtain depositors in the building and loan association. The name Lusitania was adopted because of its strong appeal to the Portuguese people. In order to impress the prospects with the magnitude of the plan, defendants published pamphlets stating that the corporation was “organized to own, operate and manage financial institutions and their affiliated companies, building and loan association companies, insurance companies, banking companies and mortgage companies operated on the Pacific Coast and in the states of California, Oregon, Washington and Nevada”. In the campaign Coffelt hired the salesmen and gave them their instructions. lie arranged for extensive radio broadcasting and newspaper advertising to supplement the work of said salesmen. The radio and newspaper advertising was done in the Portuguese language, but the evidence showed that the material for this advertising was either written or approved by defendant Coffelt. Much of this material was false and was similar in its nature to the false representations made in the Thornton transaction. It appears that Coifelt as sales manager in talking to his salesmen stated as follows: “You fellows are not delivering. You have got to bring in the money. These [448]*448Portuguese people have money, they have it under their mattresses and in cans. It is up to you fellows to bring it in. If people can’t swim, let them sink. Bring in the money. I don’t care how you get it, but bring it in.” The campaign continued over several months before and after the Thornton transaction and although a large amount of stock was sold and a large amount of deposits were obtained for the building and loan association, the whole structure finally collapsed and the Lusitania Corporation was found to be hopelessly insolvent. ■ It would serve no useful purpose to set forth in detail the entire history of the working out of the scheme of these defendants. They were in active control of the sales campaign and of the management of the Lusitania Corporation and the building and loan association. Suffice it to state that the record is replete with false and fraudulent representations made by them and their agents in said sales campaign and shows that they caused many fictitious or dummy transactions to be put through the books of the corporation and the association. This evidence amply sustains the implied finding of the existence of an unlawful conspiracy between said defendants and the implied finding of the taking of the property of Mrs. Thornton in pursuance thereof. While there is no evidence that appellant Coffelt personally made any of the fraudulent representations to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.2d 374, 140 Cal. App. 444, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-coffelt-calctapp-1934.