People v. Edwards

236 P. 944, 72 Cal. App. 102, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 387
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1092.
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 236 P. 944 (People v. Edwards) 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. Edwards, 236 P. 944, 72 Cal. App. 102, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 387 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

—Defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny. He appeals from the judgment and from an order denying him a new trial. He also appeals from an order denying his motion in arrest of judgment, but as that is not an appealable order the appeal therefrom must be dismissed.

By an information containing three counts defendant was charged with three separate acts of grand larceny. In the first count he was charged with the larceny of $500 on July 2, 1923; in the second count with the larceny of $250 on *109 July 5, 1923, and in the third count with the larceny of $150 on July 27, 1923. In e'ach instance the money was alleged to be the property of one Frances Benoit. Defendant was acquitted of the offenses charged in the first and second counts and was convicted of the crime charged in the third count. It was from the judgment of conviction on that count that he appeals. He claims: (1) that the verdict of guilty is contrary to law and to the evidence; (2) that the court erred (a) in admitting certain evidence over his objection, (b) in giving a certain instruction and (e) in refusing to give certain instructions requested by him.

An outline of the case, sufficient for an understanding of the points raised, may be stated thus: It was the theory of the prosecution that possession of each of the three sums of money was obtained from Mrs. Benoit by fraud and trickery. It seems that Mrs. Benoit’s husband and the latter’s brother had been arrested for grand larceny prior to the first act of larceny with which defendant was charged. Mrs Benoit’s testimony, epitomized and reduced to narrative form, is substantially this: I had known defendant for about nine years. A few days after the arrest of my husband and brother-in-law I called upon defendant at his home in Los Angeles. I told him that “the boys” were not guilty, and that I was worried over their arrest. I pleaded with him to help me. He said he would do the best he could, and would let me know later what could be done. At our first conversation defendant told me that it possibly would cost me something, but that he did not know how much. He asked me who the investigating officers were. I described them to him as well as I could. From the description which I gave he said that they were officers B-and K-. I saw defendant again the next day. At this second conversation he said he would be able to assist me, but that it would cost me $1,000. I told him I did not have that amount, but I managed to get $500 of it at that time and gave it to him. (It is this sum of $500 ■which is described in count one as the subject matter of defendant’s first alleged act of larceny.) I asked him how Jie was going to help me. He said that the case was in the hands of the investigating officers and that it would depend upon the evidence produced by them “as to how many counts and how much would be put against my husband. ’ ’ He said that “the less that was brought up against the boys the less they would have to answer for, or something to that effect.” *110 I asked Mm how he was going to use the thousand dollars. He said that it was not necessary for me to know—that he would use his own judgment in disposing of the money; that all that was necessary for me to do was to give it to Mm. He told me that he did not want any compensation for Ms services, that he was doing it merely for friendship’s sake, “and that the money that I would give him would simply be to compensate the officers or the other parties interested, other than himself.” Later he told me that he had seen the necessary people. Meanwhile I had telephoned to my sister for money, and she wired me $500. I gave defendant half of it—$250. (It was for the alleged theft of this sum that the charge in count two was made.) Defendant said he would trust me for the rest. He assured me that he was not going to use any of it for himself, but I told him that sometime I would compensate him with something for helping me. I asked him again what he was going to do with the money, and he said I would have to leave it to his judgment—that it was not necessary for him to tell me. I understood the money had to be used to compensate the different officials that had something to do with the case against my husband and brother-in-law, for not prosecuting them. In a later conversation I had with defendant I asked him if he could not get the boys out of jail entirely. He said he did not know, but that he would try. He said that the investigating officers were the ones who had entirely to do with the cases, against my husband and brother-in-law, and that what they said went. He assured me at every conversation I had with Mm that none of the thousand dollars was to be for him—that he did not need it and did not want it.

The next sum which Mrs. Benoit testified she gave to defendant—the $150- referred to in the third count—was delivered by her to him, according to the testimony of the People’s witnesses, under the following circumstances: Mrs, Benoit, it seems, had paid her husband’s attorney the sum of $250. When she paid the attorney, she told that gentleman that she needed the money—that she needed it to give to defendant. The attorney replied that if she really stood in need of the money he would pay it back to her in a few days. Accordingly, on July 27, 1923, the day of defendant’s arrest, the husband’s attorney, who meanwhile had revealed to the district attorney Mrs. Benoit’s intention to deliver the money to defendant, repaid to Mrs. Benoit an amount *111 equal to the sum which she had paid him. The money thus repaid to Mrs. Benoit consisted of certain bills, aggregating $250, the denominations whereof had previously been noted by the officers who subsequently arrested defendant, though Mrs. Benoit does not seem to have had any inkling of that fact or of the fact that the district attorney had been notified of her intention to hand the money over to defendant. Indeed, there is nothing to indicate that Mrs. Benoit had any reason to believe that the bills which her husband’s attorney delivered to her represented anything other than a sum of money to which she was lawfully entitled, although the officials had taken the bills from the treasury of the county of Los Angeles for the purpose of facilitating the entrapment of defendant. It seems that the district attorney, who was using the county’s money for the purpose, had turned the bills over to the husband’s attorney, who, in turn, delivered them to Mrs. Benoit, the latter evidently supposing the attorney was simply returning to her the sum of $250 which she previously had paid to him and which he had promised to repay if she needed the money to make up the balance of the $1,000 which she had told the attorney she had agreed to deliver to defendant.

Mrs. Benoit’s testimony regarding her last payment to defendant is substantially as follows: After receiving the $250 from my husband’s attorney I called defendant on the phone and arranged to meet him in front of the county jail. He arrived there in his automobile. When we met I asked him if I could keep $100 of the amount to pay some debts. He said I could, and I then delivered him $150 in bills—bills which I had received from my husband’s attorney.

Mrs. Benoit, it seems, delivered the bills to defendant while seated in his automobile with him. After handing the money over to him she stepped-from the ear, whereupon defendant drove a short distance from the scene, with the bills in his possession, when he was arrested by the officers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 P. 944, 72 Cal. App. 102, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-edwards-calctapp-1925.