People v. Jarvis

27 P.2d 77, 135 Cal. App. 288, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 594
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1933
DocketDocket No. 154.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 77 (People v. Jarvis) 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. Jarvis, 27 P.2d 77, 135 Cal. App. 288, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 594 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

The defendants were charged in an information filed by the district attorney of Fresno County with the commission of a felony, to wit, the violation of section 16 *292 of the Deciduous Fruit Dealers Act (Stats. 1929, p. 665). The information contains two counts. In the first count- it is alleged that the defendants wilfully and unlawfully engaged in the business of dealer in deciduous fruits as defined in the act without having procured a license so to do. In the second count- it is alleged that the defendants represented themselves to be cash buyers as defined in the act, “by then and there and under said representation purchasing for resale certain deciduous fruit, to-wit: grapes, of A. D. Orr and by failing within forty-eight hours after demand had been made upon them by said growers to pay the full purchase price of said deciduous fruits in lawful money of the United States, or by certified check or by cashier’s check or in any other manner at all”. Upon arraignment the defendants pleaded that they were not guilty of the offenses charged against them and were tried before a jury, which returned separate verdicts finding each defendant guilty of the two offenses charged in the information. A motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment was thereafter presented by each defendant. These motions were denied by the trial court. Judgment was thereupon rendered ordering that for each offense of which they were convicted the defendants be punished by imprisonment in the state prison at- San Quentin, California, until legally discharged and that the sentences thus imposed should run concurrently. From this judgment the defendants have prosecuted the present appeal.

Numerous objections are urged by the appellants as grounds for the reversal of the judgment. Because of the fact that- we have arrived at the conclusion that the verdict of conviction of each appellant of the offense' charged in the second count of the information is clearly not supported by the evidence disclosed by the record, the objection which relates to the second count may properly be first considered.

It is apparent that the second count of the information charges the appellants with the commission of a specific act which it is alleged constituted a violation of section 16 of the above-mentioned statute. This act was the representation made by appellants to A. D. Orr that they were cash buyers. Passing the objections which are presented to the sufficiency of the allegations contained in the second count and assum *293 ing, without deciding, that the pleading is not vulnerable to the various attacks urged against it, the complaint of appellants that the verdict of conviction of the offense charged therein is unsupported by the evidence remains to be decided.

The record shows that A. D. Orr was called by the prosecution as a witness and that he testified that he entered into three contracts with various individuals who represented themselves to be fruit buyers for the Federal Farm Lands, Inc., a corporation, of which appellant Jarvis was president and appellant Simpson, was the general manager. In considering the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict of conviction of the offense charged in the second count, it will be assumed that the corporation was merely a convenient instrumentality by means of which appellants carried on their operations, that it was wholly controlled by appellants, and that, under the circumstances developed by the evidence, the trial court was warranted in disregarding the corporate fiction and amply justified in concluding that the various fruit buyers who entered into contracts with the witness Orr as agents of the corporation were in fact agents and employees of appellants. Orr testified that the first contract which he made with the Federal Farm Lands, Inc., was dated August 10, 1932, and that the agent who- executed this contract for the corporation was H. S. Olsen. This was a written contract which was made on a blank form provided by the corporation. It was admitted in evidence. The contract shows that Orr agreed to sell to the corporation 40 tons of Thompson Seedless grapes at the specified price of $18 per ton. The instrument contained the following provision: “Payment to be made on following day after delivery.” The second contract which was made by Orr with the corporation was also a written contract made on a similar form provided by the corporation and it was likewise admitted in evidence. This contract was dated August 12, 1932, and by it the grower agreed to sell to the corporation his entire crop of Malaga grapes. This contract contained the following provision: “Guaranteed not less than $15.00 per ton and 25% of returns over and above this amount after necessary deductions are made.” The buyer who executed this contract for the corporation was R. C. Fitzsimmons. Orr testified that no grapes were delivered by him under this contract. The third contract which the witness *294 Orr testified he entered into with the corporation covered the sale of about 5,000 pounds of Thompson grapes. It was not made on a form provided by the corporation, but was written by Orr himself on a piece of paper. It was executed for the corporation by one J. W. Piles. This third contract was not offered in evidence and no testimony regarding its terms was presented. The record is silent as to whether it provided for payment on delivery or demand or whether it was a minimum price guarantee contract. The record also fails to disclose whether any grapes were delivered by Orr under this contract.

Prom the above resume of the evidence respecting the three contracts which were made between A. D. Orr and the various fruit buyers for the corporation, it is evident that the only one which tended to support the allegations of the second count of the information was the first contract which was executed by Orr and by H. S. Olsen for the corporation on August 10, 1932. This must be true because Orr testified that no grapes were delivered by him under the second contract and the record contains no evidence as to the terms of the third contract or whether any grapes were delivered under it or whether, if such delivery was made, any demand for payment of whatever amount was claimed to be due therefor was ever made upon appellants or the corporation. It must be observed that the fact of demand of payment is, by the language of the second count, made an essential element of the charge that appellants represented themselves to be cash buyers. We are therefore impelled to the conclusion that the only transaction which tended to support the allegations of the second count was the contract entered into between A. D. Orr and H. S. Olsen on August 10, 1932, which provided for the sale of 40 tons of Thompson grapes at a fixed price of $18 per ton “payment to be made on the following day after delivery”.

In order, however, that criminal liability may be fastened upon appellants as a result of the making of this contract the evidence must show that appellants, who, under the facts presented, were the principals, authorized the acts of their agent H. S. Olsen. The civil doctrine of respondeat superior is not carried into the criminal law so that the mere fact of agency is alone sufficient to impose criminal liability upon the principal (People v. Doble, 203 Cal. 510, 515 [265 *295

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 77, 135 Cal. App. 288, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-jarvis-calctapp-1933.