People v. Oringer

193 Cal. App. 2d 19, 14 Cal. Rptr. 95, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1662
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 1961
DocketCrim. 7263
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 Cal. App. 2d 19 (People v. Oringer) 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. Oringer, 193 Cal. App. 2d 19, 14 Cal. Rptr. 95, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1662 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

*20 WOOD, P. J.

Defendant was accused of grand theft in that he unlawfully took $600 which was the property of Joe Ann Hastings and A1 Siegle Imports. In a nonjury trial he was convicted. He appeals from the judgment and sentence.

Appellant contends that the trial judge erred in denying his motion to set aside the information on the ground that he had been committed without probable cause. He also contends that the judge was biased and prejudiced against him, and he did not have a fair trial.

Defendant placed an advertisement in a newspaper wherein he offered employment to a girl chauffeur. On July 29, 1959, Mrs. Hastings answered the advertisement by telephone and then, pursuant to arrangements made by telephone, she went to defendant’s alleged place of business in the Law Building in Los Angeles. Defendant told her that he wanted a chauffeur in connection with his bail bond business, that the salary would be $100 a week, and that the chauffeur was required to use her own ear. He employed her. She owned a 1953 Jaguar car, but he told her that the car was too small for such work, since she would be transporting persons who were “on bail.” She rented a larger car for $15 a week, and on Friday, August 7, 1959, she proceeded to perform her duties as chauffeur. Defendant told her that she was a good chauffeur and that she was hired permanently. Meanwhile she decided that she would buy another car.

On the following Monday, August 10, 1959, she drove her Jaguar car to “A1 Siegle Imports” in South Gate and ascertained that Siegle would pay $600 for her car. The next day she told defendant that she had an offer of $600 for her car and she was going to sell it. He told her to “pick him up,” and that he would have “another chauffeur” pick them up after she sold her car. Then she and defendant went, in her car, to Siegle’s place of business and talked to Mr. Herman, the salesman with whom she had negotiated on Friday. She gave the “pink slip” (registered owner’s certificate) to Herman, who checked the rear compartment of the car. He said that a spare tire and two curtains were missing. She said that she had left those things at her home. Then she and an employee of Siegle went, in the Jaguar car, to her home in Harbor City and obtained the tire and curtains. While they were away from the place of business (during a period of approximately forty-five minutes), defendant told Herman that he was a “bail bondsman” and that Mrs. Hastings owed money to defendant; that she owed the money because he had *21 “gone bail” for her on a drunk driving charge. Defendant asked Siegle to make the check for the Jaguar car payable to defendant. Defendant signed a bill of sale (for the car, as seller). (On the bill of sale, defendant wrote that his address was 351 South Witmer Street. That was not his address at that time—he had lived there previously. He testified that he wrote that address because it was the only address he could write—that there were only a few words which he could read or write.) Then, while Mrs. Hastings was absent, Siegle made the check for $600 payable to defendant and gave the check to defendant.

According to testimony of Siegle, he told Mrs. Hastings (after she returned from her home) that he had given the check to defendant who wanted the check in his name; and that she replied, “Okay.”

According to testimony of Mrs. Hastings, she did not owe any money to defendant; she did not authorize defendant to receive the check or authorize Siegle or Herman to make the cheek payable to defendant; she did not make any statement to Siegle in response to information that defendant had the check.

When Mrs. Hastings returned to Siegle’s place (from the trip to her home) another girl chauffeur of defendant, by the name of “Terry,” who had come to Siegle’s place, took defendant and Mrs. Hastings to a bank in Huntington Park. Defendant and Mrs. Hastings entered the bank, and defendant talked to a teller who said that it would take two days for the check to clear. Defendant retained the check, and they left the bank and entered Terry’s ear. Terry took them to a car “leasing” place in Hollywood “to see about leasing a car.” When they arrived there about noon, the manager was not present. Defendant asked Mrs. Hastings to wait there. Then defendant went away and was gone about an hour and a half. During that time, the defendant returned to the bank in Huntington Park and endorsed and cashed the $600 check. The number of defendant’s driving license was on the check. (The license had been issued about 10 years previously. He testified that he did not drive a car because he was nervous and he was not sure whether his driving license had been revoked about a year previously.)

When defendant returned to the “leasing” place in Hollywood (after having cashed the check at the bank), he made .a telephone call, and then another girl chauffeur came there and took defendant and Mrs. Hastings to a Pontiac automo *22 bile agency. Prior to going there, Mrs. Hastings had told a salesman at that place that she had sold her Jaguar car. While they were at that agency, she asked defendant about the check, and he said that he would go to his office and have a certified check “made out to” her. She had told him previously that she wanted the check cashed immediately so that she could buy a car. In the conversation with the salesman at that agency, regarding the down payment, defendant said that he had not had a chance to “get a certified check” and that he would get a certified check; that he knew that Mrs. Hastings had the money for the down payment, and that he would see to it that the money was brought to the agency. She signed a “car order” and a conditional sales contract for the purchase of a new Pontiac car. According to those documents, the down payment was to be $550. The salesman, after telling her to make the down payment within a few days, permitted her to take the car.

No part of the down payment was ever made, and the agency repossessed the car. The agency received no money from the sale but was required to pay the sales tax of $122.04 and to pay $28 for the license. In addition to that loss, the car had to be classified as a used car.

During the time from August 11 to and including August 14, 1959, Mrs. Hastings made many demands on defendant for the $600 check which was drawn by Siegle. Defendant replied to the effect that he was busy, and that he would go to his office and get a certified check. About a week after purchasing the Pontiac, when she demanded that he give the check to her, he told her to write a note to his secretary directing the secretary to make out a check for $100 for the Red Cross and a check for $600 for Mrs. Hastings. Mrs. Hastings asked defendant for the $600 check about twenty times before she referred the matter to the police. She did not receive the cheek. She did not authorize defendant to sign the bill of sale.

Prior to being employed by defendant, Mrs. Hastings lived in Harbor City which was several miles from defendant’s alleged place of business. After obtaining such employment, she decided to move into an apartment at 3918 Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles. She testified that defendant asked her to rent the apartment in his name; when she rented the apartment the defendant was present, and he told the landlord to “put” the apartment in the names of Mr. and Mrs. Oringer; she (Mrs.

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Related

People v. Enos
34 Cal. App. 3d 25 (California Court of Appeal, 1973)
People v. Cox
259 Cal. App. 2d 653 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
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252 Cal. App. 2d 381 (California Court of Appeal, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 Cal. App. 2d 19, 14 Cal. Rptr. 95, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-oringer-calctapp-1961.