People v. Cravens

180 P.2d 453, 79 Cal. App. 2d 658, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 881
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1947
DocketCrim. No. 2426
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 180 P.2d 453 (People v. Cravens) 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. Cravens, 180 P.2d 453, 79 Cal. App. 2d 658, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 881 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

DOOLING, J.

Appellant was convicted by a jury on two counts charging him with grand theft. The two counts related to two separate transactions with two different persons and for clarity will be separately discussed.

The Virginia Reame Transaction.

The second count of the information charges the theft from Mrs. Reame of $3,720 on or about November 11, 1944. The evidence shows that Mrs. Reame first met appellant in San Francisco early in January, 1944. She became acquainted with him through correspondence, having obtained his name and former address from her sister who had gotten them from a “Matrimonial Newspaper” and had had some correspondence with him. On the second meeting appellant told Mrs. Reame that “the first time he looked at me he said, ‘this is the girl I want to marry.’ ” On the third or fourth meeting [661]*661appellant showed Mrs. Reame a specimen of adhesive gauze and said that he had manufactured it, and that it was á terrible good seller. He told her that he knew everything there was to know about the manufacture of adhesive gauze and that he had started the American Bandage Corporation of Chicago and she understood that he had made $25,000 from that corporation; and he then started the Cra-Tex business in Omaha, Nebraska, manufacturing the same type of bandage and sold his interest in that company for $8,000. The parties rented a building in San Francisco, into a part of which Mrs. Reame moved as her residence and they agreed to go into the business of manufacturing an adhesive gauze bandage as partners, using the remaining portion of the building as their place of business. Mrs. Reame gave appellant smaller sums of money from time to time and on April 4, 1944, she deposited $2,300 in a bank account subject to withdrawal by herself, her son and the appellant. Later additional smaller sums of Mrs. Reame’s money were from time to time deposited in this account. Mrs. Reame drew a few checks on this account but the bulk of the money was drawn out by checks signed by appellant. The money was used partly for Mrs. Reame’s living expenses and furnishing her living quarters, largely in the purchase of materials for the partnership business and other partnership expenses, and to an amount and in a manner not definitely established for appellant’s personal use. Appellant did not succeed in manufacturing a satisfactory gauze bandage and made very few sales in such small amounts that by the end of 1944 the partnership funds were exhausted. Mrs. Reame testified that she invested her money in the partnership in reliance upon appellant’s statement that he knew the correct way to manufacture an adhesive bandage.

The witness Stone testified that he, one Burket and appellant organized the American Bandage Corporation in Chicago in 1936; that appellant represented to them that he had a secret formula for manufacturing an adhesive bandage and could manufacture a merchantable bandage; that appellant put no money in the business and in three months’ time did not succeed in producing a merchantable bandage; and that, his stock having been placed in escrow to be delivered to him only upon his manufacturing a merchantable adhesive bandage, they discharged him at the end of three months and forfeited his stock in the company. He further testified that [662]*662the American Bandage Corporation afterwards manufactured a merchantable adhesive bandage but not according to appellant’s formula, and that following appellant’s formula it would be impossible to manufacture a merchantable bandage. On cross-examination of appellant evidence was adduced which would support the inference that the Cra-Tex Company, afterwards formed in Omaha to manufacture an adhesive bandage following appellant’s formula, had been a financial failure.

Since the amendment of section 484 of the Penal Code in 1927, the former crimes of larceny, embezzlement and obtaining money or property by false pretenses have been consolidated into the single crime of grand theft. (People v. Myers, 206 Cal. 480 [275 P. 219] ; People v. Selk, 46 Cal.App.2d 140 [115 P.2d 607] ; 10 Cal.Jur. 10-Yr.Supp., Theft, § 1, p. 617.) However the elements of the several offenses have not been thereby changed. (People v. Myers, supra, 206 Cal. 480 ; People v. Selk, supra, 46 Cal.App.2d 140 ; 10 Cal.Jur. 10-Yr.Supp., Theft, § 2, p. 618.)

In the crimes of larceny and embezzlement the property must be wrongfully taken from the victim without his consent to the transfer of title to the wrongdoer (15 Cal.Jur., Larceny, § 8, p. 899 ; 10 Cal.Jur., Embezzlement, § 14, p. 251), whereas the gist of the crime of obtaining money or property by false pretenses is that the victim transferred the title to the property to the wrongdoer under the influence of the false pretenses (12 Cal.Jur., False Pretenses, § 10, p. 457, § 13, pp. 460-461).

Since by opening the joint bank account Mrs. Reame voluntarily placed a title in common to her money in appellant and voluntarily placed it in his power to withdraw the funds therefrom as owner he could not be guilty of embezzlement or larceny. (People v. Foss, 7 Cal.2d 669, 670 [62 P.2d 372] ; People v. Hots, 85 Cal.App. 450, 452 [259 P. 506] ; cases collected in the notes in 17 A.L.R. 982 and 31 L.R.A.N.S. 822; 29 C.J.S., Embezzlement, §16, p. 693; 36 C.J., Larceny, § 153d, p. 782.) The theft, if one was committed, must therefore have been obtaining money from Mrs. Eeame by false pretenses.

In the few cases which we have found on the precise subject it has been held that the procuring of money to be contributed to the capital of a partnership of which the victim is a member cannot constitute the crime of obtaining money by false pretenses because the victim as partner retains [663]*663an interest in the fund. (State v. Smalley, (Mo.) 252 S.W. 443 ; State v. Woerth, (Mo.) 256 S.W. 456 ; Reg. v. Watson, 7 Cox Cr.Cas. 364.) We are not satisfied that proof that the wrongdoer afterwards converted the partnership property to his own use while the victim was still subject to the influence of his false pretenses would not constitute the crime of obtaining money or property by false pretenses. That it would is suggested by the court in State v. Smalley, supra, wherein the court in reversing the judgment of conviction remanded the case for a new trial on the theory that the state might prove that “the partnership was used as an artifice or a part of a scheme to defraud and not as a going concern acting in good faith.” (252 S.W. 445-446.) We are moved to this conclusion by the consideration that any confidence man could safely operate through the medium of forming a partnership with his victim and then appropriating the assets of the partnership were the rule otherwise. That the wrongdoer gets the property in two steps rather than one where a partnership with his victim is formed should not absolve him of the crime of obtaining money or property by false pretenses where the false pretenses continue to operate up to the moment of his wrongful appropriation of the partnership assets contributed by his victim.

. The difficulty of the prosecution’s case on this count lies in the fact that the crime (or crimes), if any, was not complete until the withdrawal and appropriation of the money by appellant. So long as the money remained in the bank account it was subject to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
180 P.2d 453, 79 Cal. App. 2d 658, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cravens-calctapp-1947.