People v. Hickman

87 P.2d 80, 31 Cal. App. 2d 4, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1939
DocketCrim. 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 87 P.2d 80 (People v. Hickman) 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. Hickman, 87 P.2d 80, 31 Cal. App. 2d 4, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 588 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WARD, J.

The grand jury of the county of Alameda presented an indictment against the defendant, a licensed and practicing attorney and city judge of Albany, charging in three counts: First, a violation of section 653f of the Penal Code of the State of California, alleging that defendant solicited George R. Fauset, Fred D. Hurlbut and C. D. Iloel to offer and join in the offer of a bribe in the amount of fifteen hundred dollars to certain state officers, namely, the members of the board of equalization; the second count charged an attempt to commit grand theft in the same amount on the same date against the property of the same parties named in the first count and the Lakeside Club, Inc.; the third count charged grand theft of a promissory note of the value of $1500, the property of George R. Fauset. A plea of not guilty was entered to the three counts. Defendant was found guilty by a jury on the second count, *8 namely, attempt to commit grand theft, and acquitted on the first and third counts. This appeal is prosecuted from the judgment of conviction and the order denying the motion for a new trial.

Pauset was connected with the Lakeside Club, Inc., in the conduct and operation of a restaurant and liquor business. He was ordered to show cause before the state board of equalization in Oakland why the Lakeside license should not be revoked. It was alleged that one of the club’s bartenders had served intoxicating liquor to a minor female. A similar establishment and a hotel were cited in connection with the same matter. Pauset retained appellant as his attorney. Prior to the hearing, according to appellant, there was paid by Pauset $225 in two instalments, $125 and $100 respectively. Pauset testified that he had an agreement that the total charge would be $400 for attorney fees and an additional $30 as costs in the event it should become necessary to attend a hearing in Sacramento to review any possible unfavorable ruling or suspension that the board might make or impose at the Oakland hearing. The licenses of all three establishments were indefinitely suspended.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. The testimony given by the various witnesses is conflicting but, taking the portions thereof that tend to sustain the verdict, it appears in the transcript of testimony that not later than December 9, 1935, Pred E. Stewart, a member of the board of equalization, who supervised and directed the district wherein the Lakeside Club was located, informed appellant that he would recommend the restoration of the license. Prior to that time the president of the board had notified appellant that the restoration depended on Stewart’s recommendation. On the following morning appellant attempted to contact Pauset on the telephone. Appellant then called Pred D. Hurlbut, one of Pauset’s associates in the Lakeside Club and said that mew arrangements had to be made. Hurlbut referred appellant to Pauset. Subsequently, in a telephone conversation with Pauset, appellant said that there was more “talk and trouble” than had been anticipated and that it was “going to take more money”. Appellant called later in the day by telephone and part of this conversation was heard over an extension telephone by C. D. Hoel, a third associate in the

*9 Lakeside Club. Hoel testified that “Mr. Fauset asked Mr. Hickman whether or not those men would accept less than the $1,500, and I heard the defendant ask someone in the room whether it could be done for less, and then we received a negative answer’’. The board took no action on the morning of December 10th, but on the following day restored the license. On the same day Fauset executed and delivered to appellant a promissory note for '$1500. The jury acquitted appellant of soliciting Fauset and the others to offer and join in an offer to bribe the members of the board of equalization, and likewise acquitted appellant of the charge of grand theft, but found appellant guilty of attempting to commit grand theft upon the allegation that appellant attempted to take the property of the Lakeside Club and the associated partners therein. If the jury believed that appellant had fixed a reasonable fee for legal services to be rendered, and thereafter on an assurance by the supervising member of the board of equalization for the Oakland district, that the purpose for appellant’s appearance, namely, to restore the license, would be accomplished without further effort on appellant’s part, then the jury was justified in finding that an effort to obtain any amount in addition to the reasonable fee was an attempt to unlawfully and feloniously take away the property of another. (Sections 484, 664, Pen. Code.) Whether the fixing of the amount was in fact reasonable or excessive under all the circumstances, and if excessive, whether there was an intent to feloniously deprive the owners of the property, were questions of fact to be determined by the jury. The witness Stewart testified that he would have made a motion to restore the licenses of each establishment without the appearance of an attorney after thirty days had elapsed, if the licensees had appeared and made some kind of a showing, with the recommendation of the police officers.

In a case wherein the indictment sets forth several counts, and a verdict of guilty is returned on one count and a verdict of not guilty on another count, it is necessary, in determining whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain the guilty verdict, to differentiate between the essential ingredients of each offense from a factual and legal standpoint. In the instant case the manner and means employed by appellant in count two were identical with the method employed in counts one *10 and three, but the results were not the same under each count. The difference in the results is well exemplified in counts two and three. Count three charged grand theft, in that appellant “took the property of George R. Fauset, consisting of a promissory note of the value of fifteen hundred dollars”. There was no evidence to show to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt that the promissory note had any value. The note in part read: “ . . . we The Lakeside Club, Inc. & George E. Fauset promise to pay . . . ”, but it was signed only by Fauset in his individual capacity. The note was not paid and eventually the Lakeside Club was closed and Fauset resorted to bankruptcy proceedings. The jury could have, and undoubtedly did, reach the conclusion that Fauset did not believe the statement of appellant that new difficulties had arisen in Sacramento, and that Fauset gave the promissory note to appellant, but never intended to pay the instalments. Likewise the jury evidently concluded that Fauset did not believe that the demand for $1500 was for the purpose of bribery. Under such circumstances no other verdict should be returned upon counts one and three than not guilty.

An attempt to commit an offense against the law is a direct ineffectual act toward its commission, with intent to consummate the crime. In the completed offense of grand theft it is necessary that the personal property of another should be feloniously taken away. In the attempt to commit such offense, it is not necessary that the owner should part with the property, and it is immaterial whether or not the intended victim believed the statements or relied upon the acts and circumstances which culminated in the ineffectual efforts toward the commission of the attempt.

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Bluebook (online)
87 P.2d 80, 31 Cal. App. 2d 4, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hickman-calctapp-1939.