People v. Menne

41 P.2d 383, 4 Cal. App. 2d 91, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 375
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1935
DocketCrim. 1387
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 383 (People v. Menne) 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. Menne, 41 P.2d 383, 4 Cal. App. 2d 91, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 375 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The appellant in this action was convicted on four separate counts of an information charging the issuing and passing of fictitious checks in violation of section 476 of the Penal Code, and also upon one count charging conspiracy based upon section 182 of the Penal Code. The defendant’s motion for new trial having been denied, this appeal is prosecuted.

The transcript shows that at the times involved in this action the defendant had residing with him a nephew by marriage named Fred Cutts, of the age of about sixteen years. The defendant during all the times mentioned in this action was the owner of a Graham truck, and had previously been engaged in buying and selling farm produce. Cutts was living with the defendant at the defendant’s home in the city of Stockton, and according to his testimony worked for Menne in buying, selling and transporting farm products from farms to market places. In July and August, 1933, it appears that the defendant took the boy Cutts with him, and called upon several farmers in San Joaquin County and made arrangements for buying certain specified parts of their produce, melons, cantaloupes and sweet potatoes. It also appeared that at different times the defendant and Cutts went to Watsonville, where they secured truckloads of apples, which were marketed in different localities.

In the month of July or August, 1933, the defendant and Cutts visited different ranches, as we have stated, in San Joaquin County. The first rancher mentioned in count one of the information was a man by the name of Pimentel, who owned a small tract of land near the city of Stockton. The defendant was well known to Pimentel, having theretofore bought produce from his farm. The defendant introduced Cutts to Pimentel as his nephew; asked Pimentel for quotations on watermelons and cantaloupes, stating to Pimentel that he had discontinued the produce business and that his nephew was going to haul produce for some Sacramento concerns.

*94 A few days after the Pimentel transaction the defendant and Cutts called at a ranch owned by M. F. Mello, and purchased a quantity of watermelons. The same parties likewise called at the ranch owned by one C. P. Silva, named in the fourth count of the information, and made arrangements to purchase watermelons and sweet potatoes. The fifth count in the information charges conspiracy to pass fictitious checks, etc.

The boy Cutts became a witness for the state, related all the details of the transactions to which we have referred, and the circumstances connected with the commission of the several oifenses, and testified that the defendant gave him for use the four fictitious checks passed by him.

Upon this appeal it is contended by the appellant that there is not sufficient corroborating testimony, as required by section 1111 of the Penal Code, to connect the defendant with the commission of the offenses with which he is charged.

Two checks were passed upon Pimentel, furnishing the basis for counts one and two of the information. These checks are in the following words and figures:

“Clearing House No. 10 No. 191
Sacramento, California, July 5/1933 192
Pay to the order of M. Pimentel..................$27.50
Twenty-seven Dollars—fifty—Dollars To the Citizens Bank of Sacramento Commercial-Savings
McCann Produce Co.
90-645 Sacramento, California.
By J. S. McCann.”
“Clearing House No. 10 No. 190
Sacramento, California, July 5/1933 192
Pay to the order of M. Pimentel..................$25.00
Twenty-five Dollars..............Dollars
To the Citizens Bank of Sacramento Commercial-Savings
McCann Produce Co.
90-645 Sacramento, California
By J. S. McCann.”

*95 We quote the following from the testimony of Pimentel in relation to the two checks just set forth: “Q. Tell the court what you said to Mr. Menne, and what Mr. Menne said to y.ou when he came down there, in the presence of the people you have indicated? A. He came to the place and introduced the boy to me, and said he was not going to buy and haul any crops that year, but the boy was going to do it with his own truck, and it was a good Sacramento Company and good checks, and everything. Q. Did Mr. Menne say anything to you there? A. He said he was going around to see the things, and then he would come back a little later. Then, when I came home that night there was a little note home—I think my little girl said the boy delivered it—he wants three tons of watermelons for the next day.”

Thereafter, Cutts called at the Pimentel ranch with the Graham truck belonging to the defendant, and received two loads of watermelons and cantaloupes. The watermelons were of the striped variety known as the rattlesnake melons. Cutts testified that Menne took possession of both loads of watermelons. In payment of the first load Cutts gave to Pimentel the first check which we have set forth. As payment for the second load the second check which we have set forth was given to Pimentel. Upon cross-examination Pimentel testified as follows: “Q. Who opened the conversation? A. Well, Mr. Menne started first, and then they started talking together. Q. Did he take part in the conversation, or did he say anything? A. Menne introduced the boy to me. Q. Did he introduce him by the name of ‘Fred Cutts’ or ‘Freddie’? A. I don’t remember. Q. Have you any recollection as to the name under which he introduced him? A. Well, he said something, that he was his nephew, or something like that. Q. And after he introduced him to you what did Mr. Menne say? A. ‘The boy is going to run the truck’ he said; he was not going to run it back here; he has a good job; he is making $200. a month in some business, and the boy is going with the truck from Sacramento from the same houses he bought for before, and he was going to bring the checks right from the houses. Q. What was the full conversation? A. He asked first how much the melons were, the price, and then I told him. Q. Menne said, then, as I understand you, that the Cutts boy was working for a Sacramento firm that he had been *96 working for for two years? A. No; the boy is going to haul the truck up there, a good house in Sacramento, the same place that he used to haul to before. Q. Did he say who they were? A. No. Q. What did he say about the checks? A. That he was going to bring the cheeks right to me in my name. Q. Just what language did Menne use? A. He said, ‘He will bring the checks made out in your name.' Q. Did he, (Menne), use the words ‘Cutts’f A. Well, he said ‘the boy’. Q. He pointed to the boy and said, ‘The checks will be made out in your name?’ A. Yes. Q. Did he say they were going to be ‘good checks’? A. Yes; I be afraid of the boy to give him the crop, if not. Q. He told you they were going to be ‘good checks’; he put you wise that the boy was going to give you some ‘good checks’? A.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 383, 4 Cal. App. 2d 91, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-menne-calctapp-1935.