People v. Knox

162 P. 407, 32 Cal. App. 158, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 292
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 21, 1916
DocketCrim. No. 354.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 162 P. 407 (People v. Knox) 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. Knox, 162 P. 407, 32 Cal. App. 158, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 292 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HART, J.

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

The information filed against the accused is in two counts, the first charging the crime of embezzlement in that he fraudulently converted to his own use an automobile, known *159 as a “.Krit roadster,” the alleged property of one H. J. Beal, and in the second that he committed the crime of grand larceny in that he feloniously stole and carried away said automobile.

The point first called to our attention is that both counts of the information charge identically the same offense, viz., embezzlement, and that there is, therefore, no groundwork for the support of the verdict. This point, however, does not require consideration here, inasmuch as we have arrived at the conclusion that the evidence, as it is presented before us, shows that, if the defendant is guilty of any crime at all growing out of the transaction upon which this action against him is founded, it is that of embezzlement and not grand larceny.

Stating them as they were given at the trial by the prosecuting witness himself (H. J. Beal), the facts are substantially as follows: The transaction from which this prosecution arose was had between said H. J. Beal and the defendant on the twenty-ninth day of April, 1914. For a period of some four or five months prior to that time the parties named had been intimate acquaintances, both being members of the Methodist Church in the city of Napa. Beal was then engaged in the business of buying and selling real estate, and Knox was a dealer in automobiles, maintaining, in an alley or a small street in the rear of the Napa Hotel, a garage of rather limited capacity and used mainly for the storing of automobiles.

On the morning of the twenty-ninth day of April, 1914, the defendant called at the residence of Beal. The latter had just finished his morning meal when his doorbell rang. Upon opening the door Beal saw the defendant, who stated that he had called for the purpose of securing from Beal, if he could, a loan of the sum of $475. Knox stated to Beal that he was about to obtain the agency in Napa of the Maxwell automobile, and that the company required, before vesting him with the powers of such agency, that he should deposit with it a sum of money as evidence “of good faith”; that the amount he needed for that purpose would be the sum of $475; that he would be able to return the money within a few days. Beal replied that while he had no money to let out, nevertheless, he was in a position and inclined to accommodate the defendant, and asked the latter what security he could *160 give for the loan. Knox said that he could and would execute and deliver to Beal his promissory note for the amount, and as security therefor would execute and deliver to Beal a bill of sale of two automobiles owned by him—one a Maxwell and the other a “Krit” roadster. This proposition was satisfactory to Beal, who thereupon drew his check on the Bank of Napa for the sum of $475 in favor of Knox and delivered the same to the latter. Knox then delivered to Beal his promissory note for the sum mentioned, and at the same time delivered to him the bill of sale of the two cars above described. Beal did not take possession of the machines so pledged to him, but left them in the garage of the defendant, where they were at the time of the transaction mentioned. But it appears that either later on the same day upon which the loan in question was made, or the day following, Beal had heard that the defendant had not used the money borrowed by the accused for the specific purpose for which he represented to Beal that he wanted it, and thereupon and immediately called at the home of the defendant and there, in the presence of the wife of the accused, told the latter what he had heard concerning the disposition that he (the defendant) had made of the money. Knox admitted to Beal that, in the place of putting the money up as deposit to secure the agency of the Maxwell company, he had used it in paying off a balance or an amount due on the Maxwell car which, with the Krit roadster, he had pledged to Beal. The latter then declared that he did not approve of the conduct of the accused in so misrepresenting to him the use to which he intended to apply the money, and that he (Beal) desired, therefore, to take possession of the pledged property. Knox assented to- this proposition, and thereupon the two men immediately proceeded to the garage or storeroom in which the two cars were kept, and on reaching the garage, Beal said that he would, if agreeable to Knox, rent one corner of said storeroom in which he would store the machines, and asked Knox what rental he desired or would charge. The latter replied that, inasmuch as they were still personal friends, he would charge Beal nothing for the room occupied by the cars. Beal, however, said that he desired to pay for the use of the room, and thereupon it was agreed that he should and would pay therefor the sum of $2.50 per month. The two men then moved the cars to a particular corner in the garage. *161 There they remained undisturbed for some three or four weeks, when Beal, after several other previous visits to the garage and finding the cars in the comer in which he and Knox had placed them, called at the garage and observed that the Maxwell car had been removed to a shed near and on the outside of the garage. Knox was at the garage at this time, and Beal asked him “what the Maxwell was doing under the shed,” to which the defendant replied that he had sold it. “I asked him by what authority he removed it out of the barn,” Beal continued to testify, “and he laughed and said: ‘Beal, you don’t care anything for either of these automobiles, for that matter; you have a good machine, and it is your money you want’; and he further told me that he had sold it to some party formerly—oh, I don’t know—but that he had taken a mortgage on a house and lot in Vallejo as security for the Maxwell—he had sold it for $400.” Beal further testified that nothing more was said or occurred by or between them on that occasion.

A few days after the conversation above recited—Beal fixed it at approximately a week from said time—the latter again visited the garage, and there met Knox and the party to whom the defendant had sold the Maxwell car. Beal testified that he passed “the time of day” with the party to whom Knox had sold the Maxwell, and that further than that nothing was at that time done or said. Beal further testified that within about thirty days from the time that the defendant told him of selling the Maxwell, the accused paid him (Beal) the sum of one hundred dollars on the note referred to above.

In the month of October, 1914, the defendant (so it appears from Beal’s testimony) moved his garage from the “barn” (Beal sometimes referred to it as a “bam”) in the rear of the Napa Hotel to a small storeroom or building on Main Street, between Pearl and First Streets, in said city of Napa, where it remained for several months. Early in February, T915, Beal missed the Krit roadster from the garage or storeroom of Knox. Shortly thereafter, Beal and Knox'met at an automobile house in San Francisco. Beal on that occasion asked Knox what he had done with the Krit roadster, and in reply Knox stated that he had stored the machine in San Francisco, and that his purpose in taking it there was to sell it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 P. 407, 32 Cal. App. 158, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-knox-calctapp-1916.