People v. Norwoods

223 P.2d 490, 100 Cal. App. 2d 281, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1207
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 1950
DocketCrim. 2661
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 223 P.2d 490 (People v. Norwoods) 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. Norwoods, 223 P.2d 490, 100 Cal. App. 2d 281, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1207 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

WOOD (Fred B.), J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment entered upon a verdict convicting him of violating section 474 of the Penal Code, the unlawful sending by telegraph of two false and forged messages purporting to be from another person, knowing the same to be false and forged, with the intent to deceive, injure and defraud. He also appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

At the trial, appellant admitted that on September 6, 1947, he sent two messages by telegraph from Oakland to San Diego, California; each in the name of Lester Sandbergen as sender; one to L. B. Grant reading, “First note of Woodrow Norwoods has been paid and settled. Norman Seltzer has signed note of some. Norwoods owes $1420.00 plus $130.00 bonous total $1550.00 Will be forced to appear against you if suit is carried out. Letter following”; the other to himself, the appellant, reading, “Have notified L. B. Grant to dismiss paid debt See you soon.”

The messages had reference to a suit then pending in San Diego, which Grant had brought for the collection of loans in the amount of $2,520 which Sandbergen claimed to have made to appellant and had assigned to Grant for collection purposes, with power to collect, sue, compromise and discharge the same. Of that amount, the sum of $920 was evidenced by an I O U of appellant dated June 19, 1946; and the sum of $750, by a promissory note of appellant dated October 16, 1946. Grant was pressing appellant for payment. Norman Seltzer, mentioned in the message to Grant, was appellant’s attorney in that suit.

Appellant claimed that Sandbergen authorized him to send these messages and to send them in the name of Sandbergen. He testified that he drove to Oakland the night of September 5, 1947, went to Sandbergen on the morning of the 6th and appealed to Sandbergen to get appellant out of the “mess” he was in, saying that Grant was on appellant’s neck and was going to chase him out of town; that thereupon Sandbergen picked up a piece of paper, wrote on it, gave it to appellant, *283 directing the latter to go to a Western Union office and send the two telegrams, one to Grant and one to appellant, each in the name of Sandbergen; that Sandbergen gave appellant five dollars to cover the cost of sending the telegrams, and a receipt for the five dollars; that appellant went to a Western Union office, handed the messages to a clerk, who told him that the messages had to be written on company forms; that appellant wrote the telegrams on company forms, according to what Sandbergen had written, and placed them for transmission ; and that, a month or so later, Sandbergen gave appellant an authorization signed by Sandbergen, authorizing appellant to sign Sandbergen’s name to these telegrams.

Sandbergen testified that at the time the telegrams were sent his suit against appellant was pending and he wanted it to “go through”; that he did not write or send or sign his name to the telegrams, nor did he write out the substance of those telegrams, nor did he authorize anyone to write or send them or sign his name to them; that he did not see appellant on the 5th, 6th, or the 7th of September, 1947; that appellant never talked to him about that suit in September, 1947, nor at any time after Sandbergen came to Oakland from San Diego except in April, 1947; that the only time he saw appellant in Oakland was in April, 1947; that he did not at any time give appellant an authorization to send the telegrams, nor did he at any time give appellant five dollars to send the telegrams or any telegram.

The errors which appellant assigns are (1) the admission in evidence of photostatic copies of portions of the “receipt” for five dollars and the “authorization” to sign Sandbergen’s name to the telegrams, and testimony concerning the authenticity of the signatures appended to those documents, and (2) that neither of the telegrams was intended to, nor could it, nor did it, deceive, injure or defraud anyone, according to appellant’s view of the facts and the law. Neither point is well founded.

As to the evidence which appellant claims was erroneously admitted, it is clear from the record that the originals of the “receipt” and the “authorization” were, prior to the trial, delivered by appellant to his attorney, by him to the district attorney, and by him to the witness Sherwood Morrell, Examiner of Questioned Documents for the California State Division of Criminal Identification. After examination of these documents, Morrell returned them to the district attor *284 ney, who redelivered them to appellant’s attorney, who returned them to appellant.

At the trial, appellant testified he did not know where these documents then were; that if he did know he would be glad to produce them; that he would like very much to get them but did not know where he could find them; that he had looked all over for them; that before the preliminary examination he gave them to his attorney in Oakland, later picked them up and took them back to San Diego to his San Diego attorney, but could not recall whether he left them with his San Diego attorney or with Sandbergen. Earlier during the trial, the district attorney demanded that appellant produce the receipt. Appellant’s attorney replied, “We don’t have such a receipt.”

Thereafter, in connection with the testimony of the witness Morrell, respondent produced photostatic copies which Morrell had made of the receipt and of a portion of the authorization, including the purported signature on each, the negative used in making the photostatie copies, and two photostatic enlargements of the signatures appearing on the receipt and the authorization.

The photostatic copy of the receipt bears date “Sep 1947” and recites “¡Received from Lester Sandbergen five dollar” (the next few letters are obscured by a tag placed upon it during the process of photostating) “grams to” (followed by the word “dollars” in print) “L.B. Grant,” and bears the purported signature “Lester Sandbergen.” To the left of the signature appear the figures “$5.00.”

The photostatic copy of the authorization shows, above the purported signature “Lester Sandbergen” the words in typewriting “suit and the money that N” (the next few letters are obscured by a tag placed upon the document in photostating) “wes me is held in escrow by George ¡R. Baird, TJ. S. Commissioner.” The negative of this photostat shows these words above the signature, “Nor Woods to send telegrams, one to L. B. Grant, San Diego, California, to dismiss the suit filed against Nor Woods. I will not appear against Nor Woods in any suit and the money that N” (the next few letters are obscured by a tag placed upon the document in photostating) “wes me is held in Escrow by George ¡R. Baird, U. S. Commissioner.”

The witness Morrell, after qualifying as a handwriting expert, testified that he made these photostatie copies and enlargements from the documents furnished him by the district attorney.

*285 Appellant objected to their introduction upon the grounds that they were not the best evidence, that they were but portions of documents, that the originals were not in evidence, that neither the documents nor their contents were in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
223 P.2d 490, 100 Cal. App. 2d 281, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-norwoods-calctapp-1950.