People v. Moorhead

232 P.2d 268, 104 Cal. App. 2d 688, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1675
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 1951
DocketCrim. 4557
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 232 P.2d 268 (People v. Moorhead) 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. Moorhead, 232 P.2d 268, 104 Cal. App. 2d 688, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1675 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

DRAPEAU, J.

In an information containing 21 counts, defendants were jointly charged with the crime of grand theft. Counts one and fifteen were dismissed. The jury found defendant Moorhead guilty, and defendant Downey not guilty, as to count two. Verdicts were returned finding both defendants guilty as charged in the remaining counts. Defendants’ applications for probation and their motions for new trial were denied.

Prom the ensuing judgments of conviction, from the verdicts of the jury and from the orders denying their motions for new trial, defendants appeal.

Count one charged grand theft of $5,000 from Wilshire Escrow Company and Eric and Ida C. Flodine on February 13, 1948; count two, grand theft of $550 from defendants’ corporation, Safeway Homes, Ltd., on February 2, 1948; all other counts charged grand theft of sums of money from various individuals.

The following points are urged on this appeal:

(1) The verdicts are contrary to the law and the evidence.

(2) The court erred (a) in its rulings on the admission of evidence; (b) in the giving of certain instructions; and (to) in refusing to grant the motions for new trial.

Appellants Moorhead and Downey, as president and vice-president, respectively, of Safeway Homes, Ltd., a corporation, purchased a tract of unsubdivided land in Redondo Beach in the fall of 1947. They assumed a trust deed for $99,100 in favor of Eric and Ida C. Flodine, the original owners of the land. This document provided for release of individual lots from the lien thereof upon payment of $700. No payments were ever made on the trust deed nor under the release clause, Mr. Flodine testifying at the trial that he foreclosed the trust deed in March of 1949.

Appellants proceeded with the preliminary grading and improvement of the land, and employed a draftsman to make drawings of prospective dwellings to be erected in the tract.

The map of the new subdivision, known as tract number 11336, was conditionally approved by the city council of Redondo Beach on December 15, 1947. The bonds required by *690 a city ordinance, i. e., one for $110,000 guaranteeing completion of the improvement, and the other for $55,000 securing against the filing of mechanics’ liens, were posted on February 5, 1948. Final approval of the subdivision map was declared as of that date and the map was duly recorded.

Although these bonds were approved by the city attorney as to form, and by the mayor as to sufficiency, some objection was later raised to them, with the result that appellant Moor-head substituted another set of bonds for the same amounts on April 15, 1948. The original bonds were returned to Mr. Moorhead. The substituted bonds show approval by the city attorney as to form, and the mayor as to sufficiency on April 15, and 17, 1948, respectively.

Apparently, the bonds were worthless. An investigator for the State Department of Insurance testified at the trial that there was no record that the company which purportedly executed them was ever admitted to do business in the State of California.

After the preliminary grading and leveling was done late in 1947, no streets, sidewalks, curbs or sewers were ever installed, and no houses were built.

In the meantime, appellants employed Mr. J. W. Davis as their sales agent and put on a sales campaign.” The tract was signed for sale, and a majority of the prosecuting witnesses testified that they noticed the posters as they drove by. They then talked with Mr. Davis at the tract office where a map of the property hung on the wall.

The record herein discloses that after a prospective buyer looked at the property he chose a particular lot which was noted on the wall map. He examined blueprints and drawings and selected the type of house he wanted built on the lot. He then signed a so-called “Request for Reservation” indicating the house and lot of his choice and made a deposit, the amount of which depended upon whether he was a veteran or nonveteran. In such request the buyer agreed to execute a contract for delivery to him of the lot he had chosen improved with the house of his choice for a total price ranging from $7,950 to $8,950, together with payment of the balance of the down payment.

The second contract was denominated a “Building Contract” and provided that the contractor would obtain the necessary building loans to complete the purchase of the lot and the construction of the house, such loans to be amortized building loans, F. H. A. or G. I. insured loans. It also pro- *691 Tided for refund of deposits if buyer’s credit was not approved ; jthat 30 days would be required to complete and record the building loan and that the time for completion and delivery of the proposed residence should be approximately 90 working days from date of recording the loan.

Count two upon which appellant Moorhead was found guilty is based on a transaction with Mr. W. M. Goleman, a sheet metal contractor, who testified at the trial. He made an agreement in January of 1948 with appellant Moorhead in behalf of Safeway Homes, Ltd., to furnish sheet metal for 141 proposed dwellings in Tract Number 11336. In order to insure preferred service and have the required material available for the work, Safeway Homes advanced to Mr. Goleman the sum of $1,000, which was to be returned in the event the “project does not proceed.” A portion of this money was used to purchase such material. Sometime in February of 1948, the agreement was cancelled by mutual consent, and by endorsement across the face thereof, appellant Moorhead acknowledged receipt of the $1,000 theretofore advanced. On February 14, 1948, Mr. Goleman refunded $550 in cash of the $1,000 advanced by delivering the same to Mr. John Davis, the salesmanager. Later Mr. Moorhead advised Mr. Goleman that he had received the $550.

It was further testified that the account books of Safeway Homes showed issuance of a check in favor of Mr. Goleman on January 30, 1948, for $1,000, but no recorded record of the refund was found.

The following résumé is typical of the testimony given at the trial by the various prosecuting witnesses named in counts three to fourteen, and sixteen to twenty-one :

Mr. Roy H. Morris testified. that he was employed by T. W. A. airlines and saw an ad in the paper about Safeway Homes; that this tract was near his work, so on March 21, 1948, he and his wife drove over, stopped at the tract office and talked to appellant Moorhead. They selected a lot and picked out a house plan; signed a “Request for Reservation” and made a deposit of $100.

Mr. Moorhead told them that they “would have to pay $100.00 down; it was a highly restricted area; and that it would be approximately two weeks before he would know whether or not I would be accepted”; that the $100 would be refunded if the application for the G. I. loan was not approved; and that “the house would be completed within not over 90 days after I paid the hundred dollars.” At this *692 time, the witness and his wife drove around the tract and noticed that graders had gone through and marked out the streets, but “that was all.”

Shortly thereafter, the witness was notified by Mr. Davis that his G. I.

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Bluebook (online)
232 P.2d 268, 104 Cal. App. 2d 688, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-moorhead-calctapp-1951.