People v. Cornell

155 P. 1026, 29 Cal. App. 430, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1916
DocketCrim. No. 330.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 155 P. 1026 (People v. Cornell) 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. Cornell, 155 P. 1026, 29 Cal. App. 430, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 208 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 432 The defendant was convicted of the crime of forgery; appeals from the judgment of conviction, also from the order denying his motion for new trial, and assigns as reasons therefor the following grounds, to wit: 1st. Errors in the admission of testimony tending to show the commission of a prior offense; 2d. Misdirection of the jury in matters of law, including the refusal to give certain instructions requested by the defendant; and 3d. That the verdict returned by the jury is insufficient, both in form and substance, to sustain the judgment.

It appears from the testimony set forth in the transcript that some time during the year 1910, while the defendant, among other things, was engaged in loaning money for clients, one Maria Jansen called upon the defendant and left with him the sum of seven thousand six hundred dollars to be loaned out upon mortgage securities. Not having received any notes or mortgages from the defendant, Mrs. Jansen, in company with her uncle, Lauridson, called upon the defendant *Page 433 at his office in Sacramento the sixth day of October, 1913, and asked the defendant for the mortgage, or mortgages, upon the security of which her money had been loaned. The defendant replied that the mortgages were in the recorder's office. Mrs. Jansen and her uncle, Lauridson, repaired to the recorder's office, and, failing to find any such instrument, or instruments, of mortgage, returned to the defendant's office and stated such fact to him. After some conversation then had, the defendant told Mrs. Jansen and her uncle that he had lied about the mortgages, that the money had not been loaned, that he had used it himself in furthering a certain resilient tire scheme which he was promoting, and promised to give Mrs. Jansen a note for the amount of money which he had used, signed by himself, his father, and one Dr. C. O. Cartwright. To this arrangement Mrs. Jansen consented. The defendant further stated that if Mrs. Jansen would return on the following morning he would have the note signed and ready for delivery. Upon the return of Mrs. Jansen on the following morning the defendant delivered to her a note dated October 7, 1913, for the sum of seven thousand six hundred dollars, to which was attached the names of the defendant, James Cornell, and C. O. Cartwright.

The indictment alleges that the names, James Cornell and C. O. Cartwright, were forged, and upon such charge the defendant went to trial and was found guilty.

The opening statement of the district attorney included, in substance, what has heretofore been recited, and was objected to in so far as it referred to the placing of the sum in the hands of the defendant by the witness Jansen, and also as to the conversation or relation of matters which took place between the defendant and the witnesses Jansen and Lauridson on the sixth day of October, 1913, by reason of an admission made by counsel for the defendant preceding such opening statement, and the introduction of any testimony, such statement being as follows:

"Mr. Bell: May it please the court, before any statement is made by the district attorney in this case, and before the testimony or evidence is introduced on behalf of the prosecution, the defendant desires that it be made a matter of record in this court that his sole defense to this charge is that he had authority from James Cornell and C. O. Cartwright to sign their names to the note in question, and the defendant *Page 434 will rest upon that as his sole defense." And, further, when the witness Jansen was placed upon the witness-stand, the further admission: "Mr. Bell: Now, we can save a good deal of time, I think, and clear up the atmosphere. There will be no dispute that this note was given by the defendant to the witness upon the stand on October 7, 1913, as evidence of an antecedent debt, and I claim that any evidence prior to that time could not be admitted upon any other theory than to show that there was an antecedent debt of seven thousand six hundred dollars, for which the note was made, thereby showing that the note was given for the full consideration."

It is apparent from this statement that the testimony of the witnesses Jansen and Lauridson that seven thousand six hundred dollars was prior to the execution of the note in question placed in the hands of the defendant, in and of itself would be no more than simply a confirmation of the admission by the defendant of the creation, and, therefore, existence, of an antecedent debt in the event that the defendant used such money for his own purposes. The existence of the debt being admitted, it is not very easy to perceive why the circumstances of the creation of that debt could be harmful to the defendant, or upon what theory the prosecution would be excluded from proving the facts just admitted by the defendant, in the event it did not wish to rely entirely upon such admission.

The testimony of the witnesses that the sum of seven thousand six hundred dollars was placed in the hands of the defendant in 1910 for the purpose of being loaned out on mortgage securities did not, of itself, prove any embezzlement; it simply established the naked fact of the money having been placed in the defendant's possession for a particular purpose.

On the sixth day of October, 1913, when the witnesses Jansen and Lauridson called upon the defendant and asked for the mortgages upon which such money was to be loaned, a conversation was had between the defendant and said witnesses, in which all the facts, practically, stated by the district attorney in his opening statement were gone over, and the defendant then and there promised to give, and did thereafter give, the note in question. This conversation did tend to show that the defendant had embezzled the money theretofore left with him by the witness Jansen. Such conversation, and the occurrences then and there had, constituted the reason and *Page 435 the inducing cause for the execution and delivery of the note which the defendant then and there stated he would have signed and ready for delivery to the witness Jansen on the following morning. It is clear that all that took place between the defendant and the witnesses Jansen and Lauridson on the sixth day of October, which led to the giving of the note and was consummated by the delivery of the note on the following morning, constituted but one transaction, and, irrespective of whether it tended to show the defendant guilty of a prior offense, was a part of the res gestae, and admissible in testimony to show the circumstances attending the giving of the note.

The defendant relies strongly upon the decision in the case of People v. King, 23 Cal.App. 259, [137 P. 1076], wherein the undisputed rule that proof of an offense distinct from and wholly disconnected with the particular crime charged against a defendant is not admissible in evidence, is set forth and applied. In that case the defendant was charged with embezzlement. The defendant admitted the receipt of the money, and set up in defense that he had returned the same. Notwithstanding such defense and admission made by the defendant at the beginning of the trial, the prosecution was allowed to prove other distinct acts of embezzlement. We do not see that there is any necessity for either criticising or approving the decision in the King case, as it is readily distinguishable from the one at bar. The circumstances of previous embezzlement by the defendant King had nothing to do with the actual

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 P. 1026, 29 Cal. App. 430, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cornell-calctapp-1916.