People v. Platt

268 P.2d 529, 124 Cal. App. 2d 123, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1707
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1954
DocketCrim. 5122
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 268 P.2d 529 (People v. Platt) 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. Platt, 268 P.2d 529, 124 Cal. App. 2d 123, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1707 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by the People from an order granting a motion of defendant to set aside the information charging him with two counts of grand theft and four counts of forgery, on the ground he had been committed without reasonable or probable cause. (Pen. Code, § 995.)

In the information, defendant was accused of feloniously taking $2,500 and $5,000 in money from Michael Epstein-and Robert Saltzman; and of forging four merchandise purchase orders, each in the sum of $69.22, publishing and passing them knowing they were false, with intent to defraud each of the four purported purchasers, Michael Epstein, and Robert Saltzman.

Defendant owned a franchise from a manufacturer, covering several California counties, for the sale and distribution of Stroll-O-Chairs, a baby item combination. He also operated the Baby Research Institute through which the combinations were sold. Through an advertisement in a Los Angeles newspaper in which defendant offered to sell exclusive distributorships, he was contacted by Michael Epstein. Epstein was a merchant and manufacturer of infant goods and had a baby items store. About September 11, he went to the Institute; defendant demonstrated the product and explained the modus operandi of the business: how many salesmen would be needed, the number of potential buyers based on population and number of births a day and prenatal cases, and possible profits. Afterwards, Epstein discussed the matter with his neighbor, Robert Saltzman, who in turn contacted defendant a few days later.

After several conversations between defendant and Epstein and Saltzman, it was agreed that the latter two would buy the entire franchise for $7,500. Epstein and Saltzman testi *126 fied that defendant had at different times told them he had between 150 and 175 orders for combinations which he would turn over to them, and that they were walking into an established business. By oral agreement, Epstein and Saltzman were to receive 150 or more bona fide orders; defendant was to stay with them for 30 days, train them, show them how to organize salesmen, and help them obtain a franchise direct from the manufacturer. Saltzman gave defendant a check for $200 as a deposit.

On October 1, 1952, the agreement was reduced to writing by attorneys for Epstein and Saltzman and signed by the parties. Defendant warranted, in the agreement, that prior to its execution “he has taken orders for not less than 100 Combinations, delivery of which have not as yet been made.” The figure “100” was written in ink in the typewritten agreement. Defendant agreed to assign such orders to Epstein and Saltzman and to deliver to a trustee all moneys in excess of $5.00 per order which he had received from purchasers on account of the orders, such moneys to be held and distributed in accordance with certain instructions. Epstein and Saltzman agreed to pay defendant $7,500: payable $2,500 on the execution of the agreement, receipt of which was acknowledged ; $5,000 not later than November 1, 1952, on condition that the franchise had been delivered by that date. They also agreed to pay the dollar value of the inventory on hand as of October 1, 1952. Saltzman testified to what transpired at the time the figure 1 ‘ 100 ’ ’ was inserted in the blank space: that on October 1st, he had counted 147 purchase orders which had been lying in a desk drawer at the Institute; however, defendant was supposed to “turn in” 150 orders to them; defendant said, “What must I do now while I’m in here? Should I go out and sell three or four to make the 150? Then I suggested . . . ‘I have counted 147 orders. ... I am perfectly satisfied to have a figure put in no less than 100. On the rest, I’m sure that there is 147.’ ”

Defendant remained with the business for nearly one month. On October 1, Saltzman began to take an active part in the business, and during October he was in the store every day and worked closely with defendant. During the first part of that month Epstein did not give much time to the business.

Prior to October 1, defendant employed approximately 23 salesmen. In October, defendant interviewed from 150 to 200 prospective salesmen, during which interviews defendant wrote out sample or demonstration orders in their entirety, including *127 the names of purchasers and salesmen. These orders were not destroyed. “A lot" of additional salesmen were employed. Defendant did not go out into the field and solicit purchasers. Epstein and Saltzman continued to subscribe to a service that gave them a weekly report of the names of new and of expectant mothers.

During October, about 75 purchase orders were received and were placed in the desk drawer. Epstein testified, 11 Some [of the orders] that were sold I may have thrown away. ’ ’ Defendant entered some of the orders on a yellow work sheet, but it was not an accurate tab of the orders. Saltzman testified that he did not keep any records of any kind of the business during October nor at any time thereafter. All of the orders, both prior to and after October 1, were kept in a desk drawer and were neither filed nor segregated. The moneys received during October were deposited in the account of the trustee in accordance with the terms of the agreement. During the month, about five deliveries of chairs were made to customers.

Epstein and Saltzman obtained the franchise and inventory, and defendant received the money: $200 deposit on October 1, $2,300 on October 3, and $7,500.68 on October 28. The latter sum included $2,500.68 for the inventory.

On October 28 or 29, defendant returned to New York because of the illness of his wife, a fact known to Epstein and Saltzman. He gave them his New York telephone number. The sample or demonstration orders, together with all other records of the business, both prior and subsequent to October 1st, were left with Epstein and Saltzman. At that time, Epstein for the first time counted the purchase orders and found either 150 or 158 orders.

In the middle of December, 1952, after calling “four or five” of the purported purchasers in order to deliver the combinations, Epstein, with Saltzman listening on an extension, telephoned defendant in New York and told him that the orders that were left were forgeries. Epstein testified that defendant threatened he would see they did not receive any merchandise from the factory if they tried to get him back to California. As a result of the conversation, Saltzman- went to the Stroll-O-Chair factory in New York and took with him “quite a few" of the 147 orders that he had counted on October 1st. He testified that “by mistake" he left “between 30 and 40 orders" on the desk in the office of the company. No deliveries had been made to any of the purported purchasers whose names appeared on the orders, but Epstein had called four *128 or five of them. Saltzman then went to Buffalo, New York, where he saw defendant and told him what had occurred: the people whom they called knew nothing about the orders— never placed any orders; and if defendant did not give the money back, he would go to the district attorney. Defendant replied that the orders were given to him by the salesmen. Saltzman did not show defendant any of the orders that he had taken with him to the factory.

Originally defendant was charged in eight counts with forging merchandise purchase orders.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P.2d 529, 124 Cal. App. 2d 123, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-platt-calctapp-1954.