People v. Kriton

166 P.2d 45, 73 Cal. App. 2d 184, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 823
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 1946
DocketCrim. No. 2372
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 45 (People v. Kriton) 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. Kriton, 166 P.2d 45, 73 Cal. App. 2d 184, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 823 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of conviction of perjury after a trial by jury, and from an order denying a new trial. The indictment charged that the appellant had given false testimony in a case theretofore tried in the superior court wherein he had been accused of petty theft after a prior conviction of petty theft (see Pen. Code, § 666). In the theft case this appellant was accused of stealing, on December 14, 1943, two books entitled “Queens Die Proudly” and “Paris Underground,” from the Emporium, in San Francisco. At that trial he testified that he had paid for the books, and in substantiation of this testimony he produced a tag showing a sale to him of two books so entitled for $5.13. There is no dispute that the two books came into the appellant’s possession on December 14, 1943, on which day he was arrested. He was released on bail on the 16th, and it was and is the theory of the prosecution that on the 17th he, or somebody acting for him, actually purchased at the Emporium two books of the same titles, paid for them across the counter, and had the said sales tag made out for the purpose of making it appear in his forthcoming defense that such tag evidenced a cash sale made on the 14th.

The evidence shows that the appellant entered the Emporium on December 14, 1943, and took two books, “Queens Die Proudly” and “Paris Underground,” from the counters of the book department on the first floor. While there he was observed by Walter Craig, a special officer, who noted that he placed the books in a paper bag which he had brought with him. Craig followed him to the branch postoffice on the same floor, watched him remove the books from the original bag which had become torn and place them in another bag he found on the counter. Craig apprehended him as he left by the Market Street arcade.

Appellant returned with Craig to the book department, where they were joined by Edward Dalton, the store’s protection superintendent. Although the appellant then realized he was under suspicion, he did not exhibit to Craig or Dalton the sales tag nor did he tell them he had it. Craig and Dalton escorted the appellant to the elevator and took him to an upstairs office where they questioned him. In the elevator Dalton removed from appellant’s vest pocket a piece of paper with the names of four books on it, including the two which he had in his possession.

At the theft trial the appellant produced, as already noted, [187]*187a sales tag which had been tom in such a way that only the initial and the first syllable of appellant’s surname appear (i. e. “T. Kri”) but his address, 296 Third Street, fully appears. It shows a sale of two books, “Paris Underground” and “Queens Die Proudly” for $5.13. It had been torn in such a way that the date of the sale does not appear—simply the numeral “12” indicating the month of December.

The appellant at the theft trial attempted to account for the mutilated condition of the tag by testifying that it was torn in a scuffle in the Emporium elevator and that he had succeeded in retaining the torn fragment by concealing it in his watch pocket. He stated that he had kept it during his three days in the city prison and that the torn sales tag which he offered in evidence in the theft trial was the same tag as had been torn in the scuffle in the elevator. At that trial he testified that the tag was given him by a sales attendant at the Emporium on December 14th, as a receipt for payment for the two books. As will presently appear, the evidence establishes (and the verdict of guilty implies the finding) that the torn sales tag was written on the 17th of December, three days after the appellant had been arrested for the theft of the two books.

The appellant contends that the evidence is not sufficient to support the conviction as the charge of perjury is not made out by the testimony of two witnesses, or of one witness and the necessary corroboration required by the statute. (Pen. Code, § 1103a; Code Civ. Proc., § 1968.) To comply with the statute the prosecution must produce by the necessary witnesses “positive testimony as to the facts that are absolutely incompatible with the innocence of the accused. . . . Testimony proving a state of facts contrary to that sworn to by the accused, or absolutely incompatible or physically inconsistent with his evidence, will be sufficient.” (People v. Pustau, 39 Cal.App.2d 407, 415 [103 P.2d 224] ; People v. Casanova, 54 Cal.App. 439, 442, 443 [202 P. 45]; 20 Cal.Jur. 1023.) The evidence in this case satisfies this requirement.

Craig testified that he observed the appellant in the book department on December 14, 1943; that he carried a paper bag into which he placed two books which he selected from the counters; that the appellant was under Craig’s continuous observation from the first time he saw him, and that he did not see the appellant make any payment to any employee.

[188]*188Margaret Q.uagliano, a desk attendant in the book department at the time, identified the handwriting on the torn tag as her own; she testified that a sales tag is so made out as to produce by one operation an original, and two carbon copies, one of which is on tissue paper; that the writing on the torn tag matched the tissue copy of a tag written by her on December 17th; that the handwriting on the original tag dated the 17th covering the sale of two books to “T. Kri&on” was her own; that no sales tag made out to the appellant was included among the duplicates of the sales tags she wrote on December 14th; that the original sales tag of the 17th introduced in evidence by the appellant, the torn sales tag and the carbon tissue introduced in evidence by the prosecution, were all made by one simultaneous operation on the 17th of December. A comparison of the three papers indeed demonstrates this—the writing is identical and “fits” when the three sheets are laid on top of one another. Moreover in making out the sales tag the witness had started to write the first letter of appellant’s surname with a “C,” but corrected herself and wrote a “K” over the “C.” This plainly appears in all three copies.

Miss Quagliano’s testimony established that the torn tag which the appellant stated was given to him as a receipt on the 14th was actually written on the 17th of December, three days after he knew he was charged with theft. This was positive testimony, absolutely incompatible and inconsistent with that of the appeHant. The testimony of Craig was at the very least corroborative of the testimony of Miss Quagliano, if, indeed, it did not constitute direct evidence inconsistent with the testimony of the appellant. Moreover, Miss Quagliano’s testimony is demonstrably substantiated by the physical evidence of the three manifold tags. It is corroborated, also, by the negative evidence supplied by a strip of cash register “tape” —showing the sales registered through that machine on December 14th, were numbered from 44,671 to 45,222 (and including no number 46,883), and by the evidence of a similar “tape” showing the sales on the 17th, numbered from 46,380 to 46,942 which includes the number 46,883 stamped by the register when the sale is rung up. This appears in a line on the tape reading: “115 D-5.13 46883” all likewise stamped in purple type when the sale is rung up. The purple type on the “tape” and the purple type on the original pencil sales tag dated December 17 are identical; they match when placed one over the other.

[189]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 45, 73 Cal. App. 2d 184, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kriton-calctapp-1946.