People v. Hedrick

265 Cal. App. 2d 392, 71 Cal. Rptr. 352, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1632
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 1968
DocketCrim. 14516
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 265 Cal. App. 2d 392 (People v. Hedrick) 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. Hedrick, 265 Cal. App. 2d 392, 71 Cal. Rptr. 352, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1632 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

*394 WOOD, P. J.

In a jury trial, defendant was found guilty of grand theft. He appeals from the judgment.

Appellant contends that (1) the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, (2) the court erred in instructing the jury, and (3) the court erred in sustaining an objection by the People to a question regarding an investigation which defendant assertedly made.

Mr. and Mrs. Searles own a shop in Beverly Hills, known as Profils Du Monde, which sells specialty goods imported from various countries, including Africa.

In February 1963, defendant came to the shop and told Mirs. Searles that he had relatives in Africa and that he could purchase merchandise, such as artifacts and art goods, in Africa for resale in the shop. He showed her letters of credit, which he had, for purchasing similar merchandise for other companies, and told her that he was going to Africa and would purchase merchandise for her if she would give him a letter of credit. He showed her several photographs of artifacts and art goods which he said he could buy for her. A letter of credit for $5,000 was obtained at a bank on the account of Profils Du Monde, designating the defendant as beneficiary, and stating his address as the New Stanley Hotel, Nairobi, Kenya. The letter of credit stated that $5,000 would be payable to defendant when he presented to the bank certain documents such as a commercial invoice, a packing list, and a bill of lading indicating that the described merchandise had been placed aboard a ship for shipment. The letter of credit was subsequently amended to permit defendant to obtain $1,000 (of the $5,000) without presenting any document.

Defendant went to Africa and obtained payment of the letter of credit from Barclay’s Bank in Nairobi upon his presentation to the bank of documents, including a bill of lading which provided that two cases of wood carvings had been placed aboard a ship in Mombasa, Africa, for shipment to the Los Angeles Harbor. The bill of lading was sent to Mrs. Searles through banking channels. A ship 1 carrying the cases arrived in Los Angeles Harbor on June 24, 1963. The cases contained wood shavings, chips, logs, a salad set, and junk. (A bank officer and a shipping agent testified concerning the letter of credit transaction and the shipment of the merchandise.)

Mrs. Searles testified in part as follows: Near the time when the cases arrived on the ship at Los Angeles Harbor, defend *395 ant came to the shop and told her that he had two alternatives to discuss with her. He then made statements in substance as follows: He had a shipment “in customs’’ addressed to his wife. The bill of lading (for eases at harbor) means nothing. “It says ‘68 cubic feet.’ That means two yards square.’’ “Do you really think all these pages of merchandise are in two yards square?” “You give me $2,000 to pay my expenses on my family and house, or I will give you the shipment that is addressed to my wife and we will call it quits. ’ ’

To this last statement, she replied: “Do you think I am stupid?”, and he said: “Yes, I do.” She then said: “But you signed all these with ‘put on board.’ You have received the money for this merchandise. How could you get away with it?” He replied: “In the Barclay Bank is a poor Indian and he was afraid for his life and I told him, ‘You sign this, or else,’ and he signed it; and your merchandise is sitting in docks in Mombasa, in Amsterdam, under dummy names and you will never see it unless you do what I say. ’ ’

Mrs. Searles also testified that she was familiar with defendant’s signature, and that signatures on documents (invoice, insurance policy, and draft—being Exhibits 5, 10, and 11) which had been presented to the Barclay Bank for payment of the letter of credit were defendant’s signatures; she paid $5,000 to the Fidelity Bank, which paid the letter of credit; and she did not authorize defendant to send her chips and shavings for said money.

The mother-in-law of Mrs. Searles testified that she was at the shop when defendant came there to talk with Mrs. Searles in June 1963 after he returned from Africa, and that defendant and Mrs. Searles went to a room upstairs to talk; they talked very loud; she heard the defendant say: “If you don’t give me $2,000 more, you won’t see any of your money or any of your merchandise. ’ ’; and, when she heard defendant say that, she telephoned her son, Mr. Searles.

Sally Jordan testified in part that she was employed at the shop in the spring and summer of 1963; she saw defendant at the shop on several occasions; in June 1963, when defendant returned from Africa, she heard defendant and Mrs. Searles, who were upstairs, discussing his trip and what had happened to the merchandise; she heard him ask her for some money, and heard him say: “Well, yon won’t get anything unless you give me $2,000 more. ’ ’; and she also heard him say that some of the merchandise was still in Mombasa, and some of it was still in Amsterdam.

*396 Defendant testified in substance that he is engaged in the business of importing for specific orders; he had sold African artifacts to Mrs. Searles; he made arrangements with Mr. and Mrs. Searles whereby he would fly to Nairobi, they would underwrite or co-sign his airline ticket, they would lend him $1,000 as an advance payment for the trip, and they would give him a letter of credit for $5,000 to cover purchases of merchandise in Africa for their use and distribution; he gave them a trust deed as security; the letter of credit for $5,000 was issued and subsequently was amended; a purchase order, listing the merchandise to be purchased, accompanied the letter of credit; he read the letter of credit and knew that he had to perform the conditions thereof before he could negotiate it; he performed the conditions and negotiated the letter of credit at the Barclay Bank in Nairobi, and he presented the bill of lading and other documents to that bank; he received $4,000 from the bank (and previously he had received $1,000 from the bank, when the letter of credit was amended) ; the merchandise was put in crates in his presence; he caused the crates of merchandise to be put on a ship in Africa; the •merchandise was a selection as close as possible to the items in the purchase order; when the merchandise was put on the ship, he had no further control over it; the merchandise was inspected before it was put on the ship; he paid for the merchandise which he put on the ship he did not see the crates which arrived at Los Angeles Harbor; when he returned from Africa, Mrs. Searles told him that she had received the bill of lading, and she asked him when the goods “were coming in”; she asked him how he could get all the goods listed in the bill of lading into two crates, and he said they were put in by hand; they both said they were sour about the whole deal ; after the ship had arrived and the crates had been unloaded, he had another conversation with Mrs. Searles; she told him there were no curios in the crates, and asked him what had happened; he made an investigation to determine what had happened; and he did not at any time perform an act for the purpose of depriving Mrs. Searles of the goods which he purchased in Africa. (When defendant was arraigned for judgment, he told the judge that the merchandise had been stolen in Mombasa.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 Cal. App. 2d 392, 71 Cal. Rptr. 352, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hedrick-calctapp-1968.