People v. Collins

212 P. 701, 60 Cal. App. 263, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 669.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 212 P. 701 (People v. Collins) 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. Collins, 212 P. 701, 60 Cal. App. 263, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 15 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was charged by an indictment returned by the grand jury of the county of El Dorado with the crime of forgery and upon trial therefor before a jury was found guilty of the crime as so charged. The specific charge is that the defendant, with the felonious intent to prejudice, damage, and defraud the El Dorado Water Corporation, a corporation organized, etc., did, on the seventeenth day of June, 1922, make, forge, and counterfeit a certain check for two hundred dollars, payable to the order of John L. Collins and which purported to be a check drawn upon the El Dorado County Bank of Placerville and to have been signed by said corporation and R. W. Hawley, the general manager, and O. P. Pitch, the secretary-treasurer. He made a motion for a new trial and the- same was denied and he thereupon was sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison, whereupon he gave notice of an appeal from the judgment of conviction and the order denying him a new trial. The defendant, who does not claim to be an attorney at law, himself conducted in his own behalf all the proceedings following the verdict of guilty returned against him and also prepared his own brief on file in this court and appeared personally before the court and orally argued the cause. He advances a number of points upon which he claims that he is entitled to a reversal of the judgment and the order. After a careful examination of these points, we *265 have been convinced that there is no merit in any of them. We will, therefore, give each brief consideration only and will take up, out of order, the assignment that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. In stating the facts, it will be understood, of course, that they are as they were shown by the evidence at the trial. The defendant appeared in the city of Placerville some time in the latter part of May and was introduced to R. W. Browne, assistant secretary of the El Dorado Water Corporation, as the representative of a Mr. Hess, between whom and said corporation a contract had been entered into whereby the former was to construct a dam for the corporation on Webber Creek in El Dorado County. The defendant was introduced to Mr. Browne as “Judge Gordon.” He remained in Placer-ville until about the 10th of June, 1922, and during most of that period of time was in and about the offices of the corporation—in other words, made his headquarters in said offices.

It appears that prior to March, 1922, the El Dorado Water Corporation had been known as the El Dorado Water Company and that the funds of said company were deposited in the Placerville bank above referred to. The printed checks of said company at that time contained the name of the El Dorado Water Company. Some time in said month of March the El Dorado Water Corporation was organized as a corporation under the laws of the state of California and thereupon the El Dorado Water Company was transferred to said corporation. The evidence shows that the corporation known as the El Dorado Water Company was never dissolved, but that it was turned over to the El Dorado Water Corporation as the holding corporation of said company. It also appears from the evidence that, after the transfer of the El Dorado Water Company to the El Dorado Water Corporation, the latter continued to use, as a matter of convenience when making payments out of the funds of the corporation in the said bank, the printed checks of the El Dorado Water Company. The witness Browne, as assistant secretary of the corporation, had charge of the check-book and generally the business of issuing checks for the corporation. He stated that his custom was to prepare checks, when vouchers were presented, in pen and ink and then take them to Mr. R. W. Hawley, the gen *266 eral manager, and O. P. Pitch, the secretary-treasurer, to be countersigned. He further stated that he often left the check-book on his desk. He would do this, so he stated, only when he was to be temporarily absent from his office and there was no one in the office whom he had reason to believe was untrustworthy; that subsequently to the departure of the defendant from Placerville it was discovered that a number of the blank checks were missing from the checkbook. These were numbered 1388,1389,1390, 1433,1434, and 1435, each of said checks having printed upon it the words “El Dorado Water Company.” The check which is set out in the indictment as having been forged by the defendant bears the number 1435 and it was declared by the officers of the water corporation testifying in the case to be identical in all respects, so far as the printed words thereon and the size and character of the paper are concerned, with the blank cheeks contained in the check-book of the corporation. In -this connection it may be stated that the witness Browne testified that the defendant “was shown the courtesy of the office and was often seated in the swivel chair at the desk where the cheek-book was kept in the daytime and there were times when I left the office -and he had access to the check-book. ’ ’ He added that the defendant had an opportunity to remove the missing checks from the check-book and could have done so. The part of the check indicating the amount for which it was issued, in the place of having been made out in ink was filled in by means of a proteetograph and it was stated by the officers of the corporation that there was no protectograph in the office of the corporation on the date on which the check was apparently issued. The name “John L. Collins” in the check was typewritten and one of the officers of the corporation testified that the character of the typewriting was the same as that produced by a typewriting machine in his office during the period of time that the defendant made his headquarters at the company’s office. Both Fitch and Hawley positively testified that they did not attach or subscribe their signatures to the check in question and that they did not authorize any one to do so.

E. K. Blanchard, chief engineer and assistant secretary of the Neptune Meter Company, manufacturers of hydraulic apparatus, in New York City, who is a resident of said city, *267 testified that the defendant came to the offices of the establishment with which the witness was connected in New York on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1922, and, introducing himself as the purchasing agent and assistant general manager of the El Dorado Water Company of Placerville, California, after some negotiations, signed a contract with said meter company through the witness for a large quantity of water-meters; that on July 6th the defendant presented the check in question to the witness and requested him to cash the same. The witness examined the check and discovered that there was a striking similarity in the style of the signatures of Hawley and Pitch, and, having previously had his suspicion aroused as to the validity of the defendant’s contract for the meters, refused to cash the check for its full amount and gave the defendant twenty dollars only and retained the check. The witness identified the check in question as the one which was presented to him by Collins as above explained.

[1] There is other testimony in the record tending to show the guilt of the defendant as charged in the indictment, but it is not necessary to recite the same or state the substance thereof herein. It is sufficient to say that a careful examination of the testimony as the same is presented here has left no doubt in our minds that the verdict is amply supported.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 P. 701, 60 Cal. App. 263, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-collins-calctapp-1922.