People v. Henderson

179 P.2d 406, 79 Cal. App. 2d 94, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 800
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 1947
DocketCrim. 2423
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 179 P.2d 406 (People v. Henderson) 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. Henderson, 179 P.2d 406, 79 Cal. App. 2d 94, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 800 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Frederick W. Henderson and Jack Moore were jointly indicted, tried and convicted on ten counts of grand theft (fraudulent representations knowingly and de *97 signedjy made to defraud persons of money, as prohibited by Pen. Code, § 484) and one count of conspiracy (obtaining money by means of false promises with the fraudulent intent not to perform such promises, as prohibited by Pen. Code, § 182, subd. 4). They separately appeal from the judgment of conviction and order denying their motions for a new trial. By its various commitments the trial court provided that Henderson’s terms under the first three counts should run consecutively, with the remaining terms to run concurrently, whereas Moore’s terms are all to run concurrently.

These cases took over two weeks to try. The reporter’s transcript totals nearly 2,000 pages. The following tabulation will serve to summarize the provisions of the indictment. Both defendants were charged as follows:

Count Date Nature of crime Amount Victim
1. 8/17/45 grand theft $ 1,000 Mildred and Wm. Swift, Jr.
2. 9/28/45 grand theft $ 4,500 Alta and P. Lyle Barnes
3. 9/8/45 grand theft $ 1,000 Alice T. and Wm. C. Roddick
4. 9/19/45 grand theft $ 1,750 Hallet and W. M. Pearl
5. 9/29/45 grand theft $ 3,000 Ruth L. and Norman Hamstad
6. 9/20/45 grand theft $ 500 Delylia Hickman
7. 9/18/45 grand theft $ 600 Everett L. Morgan
8. 10/12/45 grand theft $ 1,500 Lillian B. and Chas. C. Adams
9. 9/5/45 grand theft $ 1,000 Alberta A. and Claude H. Buchanan
10. 9/17/45 grand theft $ 2,000 Estella M. Barnes
11. 7/25/45 to 1/17/46 conspiracy to $12,300 cheat by false Fifteen overt acts relating to transactions promises with fraudulent intent not to perform same. with George Sims, Albert and Everett Morgan, Norma and Robert Wilson, Richard Hilken, Ida and A. 0. Bass, Adrianne and Gustav Lund.

*98 The prosecution, of these defendants grew out of the operation by them of what purported to be a general contracting business conducted by Henderson under the name, The Bay Pacific Company. Moore was associated with the enterprise, first as salesman and later as general sales manager. These two men and others from July of 1945 to January of 1946, when they were arrested, devoted their principal efforts towards the solicitation of contracts calling for the construction of new homes and business buildings. The evidence shows that the appellants sold many contracts during this period and collected from the persons desiring to build substantial sums of money. It also shows that in the course of selling these construction contracts numerous false representations were made in order to induce the prospective customers to enter into these contracts. It is these false promises and the failure to perform these contracts that form the basis of this prosecution.

Both appellants urge that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdicts. Such contention, so far as Henderson is concerned, totally lacks merit. So far as Moore is concerned, the contention is partly meritorious, as will later appear.

Henderson was the promoter and organizer of the entire project. He, apparently, is a man of unusual talents and imagination. At the time of trial he was but 28 years of age. His father is a building contractor, and Henderson got his first building experience with him. This appellant started on his own as a builder in Stamford, Connecticut, in 1939. He conceived the idea of building houses in groups on an assembly line basis, the workmen working in crews on a piecework basis. He figured that he could thus build a house, complete, in twenty-four or five working days. He started to put this .plan into effect in Westchester County, New York. On the first sixty houses thus constructed he made a net profit of $500 or $600 per house, but he shortly ran into difficulties with labor unions and with various contractors. His plan envisaged the dispensing with subcontractors. There were over a hundred more houses constructed on a fixed price basis, and because of these difficulties he went broke, losing over $100,000. He then worked for a while in Washington, D. C., and in Virginia, and then was forced to stop work because of rheumatic fever. While ill he worked out a plan to eliminate the difficulties he had run into in New York. It was the plan thus conceived that he attempted to put into effect in Alameda *99 County. The plan included cost, plus a percentage of profit, contracts, to do away with the danger of loss from fixed price contracts. It included the concept of the one construction company hiring at high wages skilled mechanics in all branches of the building industry, thus dispensing with subcontractors. It envisaged the building company owning many of its own sources of materials, particularly lumber, and purchasing other materials in large lots. It included the building company working out all details of financing the various projects and furnishing to their clients every service necessary to the purchasing, designing, financing and constructing a house.

With this general plan in mind Henderson came to San Francisco in December, 1944. For a short while he worked with a wrecking company and then was hired to sell paint jobs for a painting company. At this company he first met M. B. Arnold, who subsequently became associated with Henderson, and who was one of the State’s witnesses. Henderson put on such a campaign selling paint jobs for his employer that he was shortly bringing in ninety per cent of all paint jobs performed by his employer. In March, 1945, he quit this job, and in April started to organize The Bay Pacific Company. This company mushroomed in startling fashion.

Henderson’s original plan was to organize a corporation and to turn over the assets and liabilities of his company to it. A corporation called Bay Pacific Corporation was in fact incorporated in August, 1945, and a permit to sell stock was secured which required the first $25,000 secured from the sale of stock to be escrowed. This permit was voluntarily surrendered in November of 1945. The corporation at no time operated the business in question. The business was the sole property of Henderson. Many of the contracts and receipts introduced into evidence are signed “Frederick W. Henderson, Sole Owner,” and many of the checks introduced into evidence were endorsed “Bay Pacific Company . . . F. W. Henderson, Sole Owner.”

At this point a few words should be said about appellant Moore. Until he became associated with Henderson, in July of 1945, he was in the reroofing and remodeling business in Tacoma, Washington. He had responsible positions with responsible concerns in Sacramento and Los Angeles and had been in business for himself in Montana where he first met Arnold, who recommended him to Henderson.

*100 The amazing development of The Bay Pacific Company was testified to by Henderson and by several of his employees.

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Bluebook (online)
179 P.2d 406, 79 Cal. App. 2d 94, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-henderson-calctapp-1947.