People v. Howard

160 P. 697, 31 Cal. App. 358, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 446
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 9, 1916
DocketCrim. No. 345. Third Appellate District.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 P. 697 (People v. Howard) 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. Howard, 160 P. 697, 31 Cal. App. 358, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 446 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of grand larceny, and appeals from the judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The information is in three counts, each stating a different offense, viz.: The first charging the larceny of $305 in money, *360 the second the embezzlement of said sum, and the third the receiving of said money knowing it to have been previously stolen.

The attack upon the verdict is upon numerous grounds, which, generally stated, are that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the information, in disallowing certain voir dire questions by the defendant to a certain juror, in denying the challenge by the defendant of a certain venireman upon the ground of actual bias, in refusing to require the people to make an election of the particular count of the several set out in the information upon which they intended to rely, in refusing to allow the defendant thirty peremptory challenges, the theory being that he was entitled to ten such challenges upon each of the offenses stated in the information, in its rulings upon questions involving the legal propriety of the admissibility of certain evidence, and in disallowing certain instructions preferred by the accused. It is further insisted that, if the defendant was guilty of any crime whatsoever, it was not that of grand larceny, of which the jury convicted him, but that of embezzlement. This last point necessarily involves, and its solution depends upon, the question whether the evidence supports the verdict.

Under the several heads above specified, many specific objections to the legal soundness of the result reached at the trial are here interposed and argued in the briefs. Such of these as we deem entitled to special notice and review we shall consider.

The facts, as gleaned from the evidence, may be summarized as follows: In the early part of the month of August, 1915, the defendant and his wife arrived at the city of Stockton and, under the name of Howard, took rooms at a house known as the “Adams Apartments.” They were strangers in Stockton, and at said apartments represented themselves as being husband and wife. A few days thereafter they moved to a rooming-house in said city, known as the “MePhee Apartments,” where they remained until their departure from Stockton, on the thirtieth day of said month of August. While stopping at the last-named apartments, and about the middle of the month named, “Mrs. Howard” secured employment as a stenographer with a commercial college in said city known as the Western School of Commerce. Said college was incorporated, and at the time of the *361 employment of Mrs. Howard, one John R. Humphreys was president of the corporation and principal of the school, and as such was authorized to employ such assistants as were found necessary to aid in carrying on the business of the institution. When she applied for employment she represented to Humphreys that her name was “Miss Helen Burns,” and under that name she accepted the employment. “Mrs. Howard” worked at a desk located in the office of the secretary of the corporation. At about the hour of 12 o’clock, noon, on the thirtieth day of August, 1915, she left the office of the secretary and did not return. A short time after her departure, and after the time at which she should have returned to the office and resume the discharge of her duties, it was discovered upon investigation that the sum of $305 was missing from the cash register which was kept in the office of the secretary.

It transpired that, on the day last mentioned, Howard and his wife met at a point on one of the streets of Stockton and hired a taxi-cab, in which they were driven to Lodi, a distance of a few miles north of Stockton. At Lodi, Mrs. Howard purchased some wearing apparel at one of the stores in said town and Howard, at another store, bought a suit of clothes and a suit case. The clothes worn by him to Lodi he left at the store at which he purchased and donned the new suit. Howard also went to the bank at Lodi and exchanged some gold for paper money. Within a brief time thereafter, Howard and his wife at Lodi boarded a northbound train and went to Sacramento, at which place they bought tickets for the east, and on the said thirtieth day of August together left for the east. They were later arrested in the east and returned to Stockton. While in the east and before their arrest, the defendant, whose true name is Walter Howard Allen, gave his name and registered at hotels -variously as “Taylor,” “Churchill” and “Howard.”

There is, in the record, testimony from which the jury could justly have inferred, as perhaps they did conclude, that the defendant down to the day upon which he with his wife left Stockton, was wholly without financial means, with the exception of five dollars in gold from which he paid for some drinks at a bar for himself and one R. J. Richardson, who, with his wife, also occupied rooms at the MePhee Apart *362 ments, and to whom the defendant explained that he had received the money from his wife.

It further appears that Mrs. Howard, a day or two before the date of her departure from Stockton, took to her apartments a bank-book which was the property of the institution by which she was then employed, and that while she and the defendant were eating their lunch on that occasion, Mrs. Eiehardson, wife of the party of that name above referred to, came into their apartments, whereupon the defendant picked up the bank-book from the table where it had been placed by Mrs. Howard, and, addressing Mrs. Eiehardson, remarked: “Look what my little girl has banked to-day. Three hundred and sixteen dollars! Wouldn’t that make a fine trip?” To this Mrs. Howard rejoined: “No, the straight and narrow path for me.”

It was further shown that, on two several occasions, Mrs. Howard asked the secretary of the corporation, J. W. Eousch, whether she “should take money received at the school to the bank,” and the secretary replied that she should not.

It was shown, and, in fact, the defendant admitted, that, within an hour before he and his wife left Stockton for Lodi, he held a conversation with his wife through the telephone from a saloon which he -had been in the habit of frequenting while in Stockton, that, within a brief time thereafter his wife called and talked with him over the same telephone, and that thereupon the defendant left the saloon, met his wife, and immediately left with her for Lodi in the manner above described.

Certain statements made to the sheriff by the defendant after his arrest were received in evidence at the behest of the people. Thus it was shown that, among other declarations, the defendant said that he could not be convicted of any offense which might be charged against him without the testimony of his wife disclosing that he was implicated in the crime, and that his wife could not testify against him without his consent. He further asseverated his innocence of any connection with the commission of the crime by his wife, and declared that he had no knowledge before she took the money that she intended to do so. He admitted, however, that, when he met his wife just before leaving Stockton, she told him that she had taken the money, and that he then said to her that she had better “beat it,” by which he meant *363

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Bluebook (online)
160 P. 697, 31 Cal. App. 358, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-howard-calctapp-1916.