People v. Garfield

707 P.2d 258, 40 Cal. 3d 192, 219 Cal. Rptr. 196, 1985 Cal. LEXIS 402
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1985
DocketCrim. 24244
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 707 P.2d 258 (People v. Garfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Garfield, 707 P.2d 258, 40 Cal. 3d 192, 219 Cal. Rptr. 196, 1985 Cal. LEXIS 402 (Cal. 1985).

Opinion

Opinion

BROUSSARD, J.

Defendant appeals from a conviction of offering a false or forged instrument to be filed in a public office. (Pen. Code, § 115.) He contends that his prosecution was barred by the statute of limitations. We agree and reverse the judgment.

I.

On November 19, 1981, the San Francisco District Attorney filed a complaint in the municipal court charging defendant with a violation of Penal Code section 115. 1 The complaint alleged that the crime had been committed between October 28, 1978, and November 16, 1978. Defendant demurred, contending that the complaint was barred by the general three-year statute of limitations for felony prosecutions. (Former § 800, subd. (a).) 2 The People argued that section 115 offenses were exempted from the three-year statute of limitations by former section 799, which provided an unlimited time for the prosecution of certain specified offenses, including the “falsification of public records.” The magistrate denied defendant’s demurrer without explanation. In the trial court defendant moved to dismiss on the same grounds. The motion was denied, again without a statement of reasons. Defendant was tried before a jury and found guilty.

Because this opinion is limited to the statute of limitations question, a detailed statement of the facts is unnecessary. It is enough for our purposes to say that defendant, who is an attorney, drafted a will for Mrs. Estelle ReQua in 1974. The prosecution alleged that defendant subsequently altered the will without Mrs. ReQua’s knowledge and added a bequest to his wife. Defendant then offered the allegedly forged will for probate upon Mrs. ReQua’s death in 1978. Three years after the will was probated, the primary beneficiary of the estate informed the police of his suspicion that defendant had falsified the will. It is not disputed that the resulting criminal complaint was filed more than three years after the alleged offense.

*195 Two statutes are primarily involved in this case. Section 115 provides in pertinent part: “Every person who knowingly procures or offers any false or forged instrument to be filed, registered, or recorded in any public office within this state, which instrument, if genuine, might be filed, or registered, or recorded under any law of this state or of the United States, is guilty of [a] felony.” 3 At the time of the offense, section 799 provided in relevant part: “There is no limitation within which a prosecution for . . . the falsification of public records must be commenced.” 4 We must decide whether a violation of section 115 constitutes the “falsification of public records” within the meaning of section 799.

A will is not a public document before it is filed for probate. Thus, any falsification of a will before it is filed would not constitute the falsification of a public record. The Attorney General concedes this point, but argues that the exception to the statute of limitations still should apply to section 115 offenses. He contends that there is no distinction “between filing a false document in order to create a false public record and falsifying a public record. ...”

The Attorney General misinterprets the conduct proscribed by section 115. The gravamen of the charged offense is the offering for probate of a will known to be false or forged. (See People v. Standley (1932) 126 Cal.App. 739, 746 [15 P.2d 180].) The offense was complete at the moment defendant offered the will for probate with knowledge of its falsity. The fact that the will was subsequently accepted for filing and became a part of the public record is not relevant to the statutory proscription. Let us assume, for example, that the forgery here had been discovered before the will had been officially recorded as a public document, or that the will had not been accepted for filing because of some technical defect unrelated to the forgery. In either case defendant would have been guilty of violating section 115. He certainly could not have asserted as a defense that the forged will he offered for filing had not yet been recorded. Whether or not a violation of section 115 actually produces a false public record is simply not material to the offense defined by that statute.

Our interpretation of section 115 is reinforced by the existence of a separate statutory prohibition against the falsification of public records. Gov *196 ernment Code sections 6200 and 6201 expressly prohibit the “altering or falsifying” of public records or documents. 5 Thus, under the current statutory scheme, the procuring or offering of a false instrument for filing in a public office (§ 115) is an entirely separate offense from the falsification of a document already part of the public record (Gov. Code, §§ 6200, 6201).

The independent nature of these offenses is illustrated by the facts in People v. Horowitz (1945) 70 Cal.App.2d 675 [161 P.2d 833]. In that case, defendant forged a will on a sheet of paper bearing his mother’s signature and then employed an attorney to probate the forged will. After the will had been filed for probate, defendant obtained possession of the will at the county clerk’s office and sat at a table comparing the will with other documents. According to prosecution experts, the will had been written on three different occasions: first, the signature was written, then the body of the will was prepared, and finally the names of the witnesses were added. Defendant was charged with, inter alia: forgery of a will (§ 470), procuring or offering a forged will for filing (§ 115) and altering or falsifying a public record (Gov. Code, §§ 6200, 6201).

In the instant case, unlike Horowitz, there was no evidence that defendant in any way tampered with the will once it had been filed. Presumably for this reason the prosecution elected to charge only a violation of section 115. It is clear that had defendant been charged with “falsifying” a public document under Government Code sections 6200 and 6201, the statute of limitations would not have barred prosecution. The fact that defendant was not charged with violating those sections suggests that the prosecution concluded, as do we, that defendant’s conduct did not constitute the falsification of a public record.

People v. Olson (1965) 232 Cal.App.2d 480 [42 Cal.Rptr. 760] appears to be the only reported decision to consider whether a section 115 prosecution is excluded from the statute of limitations by former section 799. Although both defendant and respondent cite Olson to support their opposing contentions, that case was decided on grounds completely unrelated to the issue before us.

*197 The defendants in Olson

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Bluebook (online)
707 P.2d 258, 40 Cal. 3d 192, 219 Cal. Rptr. 196, 1985 Cal. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-garfield-cal-1985.