People v. Larue

83 P.2d 725, 28 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 622
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 1938
DocketCrim. 439
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 P.2d 725 (People v. Larue) 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. Larue, 83 P.2d 725, 28 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 622 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

By an indictment of the grand jury of Imperial County, containing fifteen counts, defendant was charged with fifteen violations of section 476a of the Penal Code. He was found guilty on fourteen counts and has appealed from the judgments pronounced upon him and from the order denying his motion for new trial. Count ten was dismissed.

Defendant maintains that no count of the indictment states facts sufficient to constitute a public offense. With the exception of the date, the amount, and the name of the payee of each check, the charging part of each count is similar. With two exceptions, to be hereinafter noted, the charging portions of the indictment follow the language of the first paragraph of section 476a of the Penal Code. This has been held a sufficient pleading. (Ex parte Shackleford, 64 Cal. App. 78 [220 Pac. 430] ; People v. Carmona, 80 Cal. *751 App. 159 [251 Pac. 315] ; People v. Anderson, 58 Cal. App. 267 [208 Pac. 324].)

The two particulars in which it is maintained that the indictment departs from the usual pleading, are: (1) After alleging the intent to cheat and defraud the payee, there was added, “and the First National Bank of Bellflower, California, a corporation”, upon which the check was drawn; (2) after the allegation that defendant “did . . . make, draw, utter and deliver” the check, there was added the further allegation that he “caused to be made and, to be delivered” the check to the payee. As each count of the indictment contained sufficient allegations under the statute, and as the portions of which defendant complains could not cause prejudice, they may be regarded as surplusage and disregarded under the rule announced in People v. Handley, 1.00 Cal. 370 [34 Pac. 853].

Defendant next urges that the cases should have been tried in Los Angeles County, because, as he maintains, the offenses were committed there and not in Imperial County. The general facts concerning thirteen of the checks are similar. We will consider these counts together. The facts proved under count eight differ from the others and must be considered separately.

Defendant was a hay dealer with his business address at 5703 Riverside Drive in Los Angeles, California. In December, 1937, and January, 1938, the months involved here, he carried his bank accounts in the First National Bank of Bellflower. He employed Ben J. Broecker to buy hay for him in Imperial County. He also employed several truck drivers to transport the hay from Imperial County to his yard and to other points of delivery in Los Angeles County. Each day defendant would sign a number of blank checks and leave them in his office with C. D. Bowler, his bookkeeper. Before a truck driver started on his trip to Imperial County to pick up his load of hay, he would call at the office and Bowler would give him one of these blank checks with which to pay for the hay. Occasionally Bowler would date a check but he did not fill in the name of the payee nor the amount of the check. After the hay had been loaded and weighed in Imperial County, the amount of the check and the name of the payee were filled in by either the truck *752 driver or by Broecker. The check was then delivered to the seller of the hay, or to a scales company which delivered it to the seller. Defendant admitted knowing all the details of these transactions. He testified that it was his plan of doing business and had been in operation for several years.

Under the foregoing facts there can be no question of the venue of the thirteen offenses’ lying in Imperial County. The truck drivers and Broecker were agents of defendant with authority to fill in the blanks on the cheeks and to deliver them. The possession of the checks remained in defendant, through his agents, until they were completed and delivered in Imperial County. While the cheeks were signed, and some of them dated, in Los Angeles County, they were not completely made or drawn there, but in Imperial County, where they were uttered and delivered. We need not decide the question of the right to prosecute these offenses in Los Angeles County under the provisions of section 781 of the Penal Code. That question is not involved here.

A different situation is presented by count eight of the indictment. That count charged violation of section 476a of the Penal Code by the delivery of an insufficient fund cheek dated December 31, 1937, for fifty dollars to L. P. Ware, the payee.

The evidence discloses that Ware, a resident of Brawley in Imperial County, sold a truck to defendant on a conditional sales contract upon which payments of fifty dollars a week were to be made; that the check in question was in payment of one of these weekly instalments; that it was signed by defendant and fully made out by Bowler in Los Angeles; that in the usual course of business it was mailed to Ware in Brawley; that it was received by Ware through the United States mail; that when presented at the First National Bank of Bellflower payment was refused because of insufficient funds; that the check has not been paid.

It is clear that under these facts the check was both made and drawn in Los Angeles. The question remaining is: Was it uttered or delivered in Imperial County? If not, the venue of this offense lay in Los Angeles County and not in Imperial County.

The word “utter” was thus defined by the Supreme Court in People v. Tomlinson, 35 Cal. 503:

*753 “The words ‘utter’ and ‘publish’, in the law of forgery, are synonymous, for the meaning of both is ‘to declare or assert, directly or indirectly, by words or actions’, that the forged instrument is genuine. Thus, to offer a forged bank note in payment, is both to utter it and to publish it. To complete the offense of uttering and publishing, it is not necessary that the note should be passed.” (See, also, People v. Nishiyama, 135 Cal. 299 [67 Pac. 776].)

When the check was fully made out, addressed to Ware, and deposited in the mail in Los Angeles in the usual course of business, there was an implication or assertion that it was genuine and would be paid on presentation. Therefore, we conclude that the check was uttered in Los Angeles.

The meaning of the word “deliver” does not need special definition here. In speaking of what constitutes delivery of a negotiable instrument, in Loud v. Collins, 12 Cal. App. 786 [108 Pac. 880], it was said:

“The place where the contract was written, signed or dated does not necessarily fix or determine the place where it was executed. Delivery of an instrument is the final act essential to its consummation as an obligation. . . .
“The general rule is that depositing a note in the post-office addressed to the payee with his assent is a sufficient delivery thereof. (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 67; Barrett v. Dodge, 16 R. I. 740 [27 Am. St. Rep. 777, 19 Atl. 530] ; Ivey v. Kern County L. Co., 115 Cal. 196 [46 Pac. 926] ; Bank of Yolo v. Sperry Flour Co.,

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83 P.2d 725, 28 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-larue-calctapp-1938.