People v. Dillon

36 P.2d 416, 1 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1255
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 3, 1934
DocketCrim. 2557
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 416 (People v. Dillon) 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. Dillon, 36 P.2d 416, 1 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1255 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

WILLIS, J., pro tem.

In an indictment, appellant was charged with three counts of grand theft, the first charging the felonious taking on October 27, 1933, of 100 dozen men’s work shirts of the value of $450, in lawful money of the United States, the property of American National Red Cross, a corporation; the second similarly charging the taking on August 24, 1933, of 3,000 yards of cotton gingham fabric, of the value of $225, the property of the same corporation, and the third a similar taking on October 17, 1933, of 30 dozen men’s cotton trousers of the value of $225 in lawful money of the United States, the property of the same corporation. At the trial before the court and jury he was convicted on the first two counts and acquitted on the third. A motion for new trial was made and denied and from the judgment entered and the order denying that motion, appellant has taken this appeal, assigning five points as error, namely: (1) That there was no proof that any of the property was stolen. (2) That there was no proof that the merchandise taken was of a value in excess of $200. (3) That it cannot be ascertained from the records if all the merchandise was taken at one time or at various times, and, if taken at various times, how much was taken at each time. (4) That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury with reference to the testimony of an accomplice. (5) That the district attorney was guilty of misconduct in his argument to the jury.

The record of proceedings at the trial of this ease comprises slightly over 500 pages, a careful reading and study of which reveals that defendant was capably represented and that the lower court was extraordinarily patient and lenient in allowing him wide latitude of cross-examination and defense. A summary of the facts which the evidence tended to establish appears necessary as a basis on which to predicate our decision herein on the several points raised.

*227 Since April, 1932, appellant had been and at the dates of the offenses charged herein was employed as manager of the warehouse of the Los Angeles Chapter of American National Red Cross, located at Fourth and Anderson Streets, in Los Angeles, California, and wherein was received and kept for distribution to agencies of charity throughout the county large quantities of merchandise which was in the charge and care of appellant, and which he distributed out on requisitions presented to him by those on the list of agencies. Some six blocks distant from the warehouse one Harry Horowitz operated a department store. To him the appellant, giving the name of Broderick, sold, about August 24, 1933, 3,000 yards of cotton gingham fabric, and about October 27, 1933, 100 dozen men’s work shirts, and about October 17, 1933, 30 dozen men’s cotton trousers. Prior to these dates and beginning in July, 1933, appellant had made many similar sales of merchandise to Horowitz, and over the period up to November when appellant was arrested, such sales had aggregated some $1500, of which Horowitz still owed about $650. Horowitz did not know or suspect that “Broderick” was Dillon, the man who was in charge of the warehouse, but was informed by the latter that the goods he was selling had been procured from steamship companies as unclaimed or undelivered shipments, a well-known source of such merchandise to Horowitz. Shortage of stock being discovered or suspected, an investigation and audit followed, culminating in the indictment herein.

Appellant’s first point is that the prosecution failed to prove that the property in question was stolen from the Red Cross warehouse, and cites the ease of People v. Williams, 57 Cal. 108, in support of his claim. In that ease, wherein judgment of conviction was reversed, the evidence revealed that the alleged owner of the money charged to have been stolen was dead, and no proof was offered or given to establish the fact that the deceased had ever lost any money or suffered any theft of his money. In this case there is a plenitude of evidence to sustain the implied finding of the jury that the property sold to Horowitz came from the warehouse in question, and that it had been taken by appellant with the felonious intent of permanently depriving the owner thereof. Appellant lays special stress on insufficiency of evidence adduced through the auditors who took *228 inventory of stock on hand in the warehouse and checked with records found therein, and their testimony as to shortage in gingham and shirts found by them to exist. It would unduly prolong -this opinion to recite the proofs in respect to loss of property from the warehouse over the period in question, and it must suffice herein to say that we discover no error of the lower court in its rulings on admissibility of evidence or motions to strike, and that the evidence admitted and not stricken, produced through the auditors, taken in conjunction with that of many other witnesses who gave testimony tending to identify the merchandise in question is clearly sufficient to support the finding of the jury that the goods in question were stolen from the Red Cross warehouse.

There is no merit in the point that value was not established at a sum in excess of $200 as to property described in each of the first two counts. Appellant’s contention is founded on the language of section 678 of the Penal Code, which provides that value of property, where it is determinative of the .grade of an offense, ‘1 shall be estimated exclusively in United States Gold Coin”. The estimates of value given by the witnesses herein were made on the basis of United States currency which, at the time of the alleged offense, we take judicial notice, was redeemable in United States gold coin. As was aptly-said in a similar instance in the case of People v. Kea-eh, 28 Cal. App. 194 [151 Pac. 747], “And it would surely be catching at a straw to reverse this case merely because no witness had estimated the value ‘in gold coin of the United States of America’.”

Appellant’s third point presents a technical question and the argument of his counsel is highly imaginative in that it is sought to cast doubt on the sufficiency of the evidence to show that the whole of the merchandise described in each separate count was ■ taken at one time, and by which it is suggested that it may have been taken at various times in quantities of less value than $200 and stored at some other convenient place before delivery to Horowitz, thus reducing the grade of the offense below that charged in the indictment. The proof is quite clear that appellant delivered in his own automobile the entire 3,000 yards of gingham to Horowitz in one delivery. This fact taken in connection with the fact that appellant was custodian at the *229 warehouse where this gingham was stored, only some six blocks distant from the Horowitz store, and that it was delivered soon after bargaining for the sale on the basis of a sample, is sufficient to support the implied finding by the jury that these 3,000 yards of gingham were all taken by appellant from the warehouse at the same time for delivery to Horowitz, with intent to permanently deprive the owner thereof. As to the 100 dozen shirts,- the evidence is of similar character and probative effect, but with the variation in respect to delivery, there being two deliveries of about 50 dozen each on the same day, after sale had been agreed upon between appellant and Horowitz.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P.2d 416, 1 Cal. App. 2d 224, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dillon-calctapp-1934.