People v. Rittenhouse

206 P. 86, 56 Cal. App. 541, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 528
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 1922
DocketCrim. No. 1016.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 P. 86 (People v. Rittenhouse) 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. Rittenhouse, 206 P. 86, 56 Cal. App. 541, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 528 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This appeal is taken from a judgment of conviction of the crime of embezzlement and of the crime of forgery, charged in the third and fourth counts of an indictment against the defendant, which indictment contained five counts. Appellant was found “not guilty” on count one and the district attorney, prior to the trial, dismissed as to counts two and five.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. The defendant, Rittenhouse, in July, 1920, was employed as a bookkeeper for the Valley Oil Company, in Fresno, California. Among his duties- were those of keeping the books of the company and of signing checks of the company, jointly with the president, Edward L. Tobin. The Valley Oil Company kept a checking account in the Bank & Trust Company of Central California, in Fresno, which bank, a short time prior to the date of the alleged commission of the crimes' herein considered, had changed its name to the Fidelity Trust & Savings Bank. Mr. Tobin, as president of the Valley Oil Company, secured a loan from this bank in the sum of $2,500 and had it deposited in the bank to the credit of the Valley Oil Company. By some mistake occurring during the transfer of the bank’s business from the old name to its new name, the bank inadvertently credited the Valley Oil Company with two deposits of $2,500 each. The second deposit was credited on May 12, 1920, the day after the first deposit was credited. The defendant was in a position to become aware of this error and it afforded him an opportunity for embezzlement. It was shown by the bank’s ledger sheet that on July 29, 1920, $600 was drawn from the company’s account; on the following day, the ledger shows that $1,900 was withdrawn, making a total of $2,500, the amount of the duplicate deposit. This amount was checked out without the consent of the president. The company was a small one and was virtually controlled by its president, Mr. Tobin. All checks required the signatures of Tobin as president *543 and of the defendant as secretary. It appears from the evidence that on some occasions Tobin signed his name as president to certain blank checks to be used in the business. The evidence was conflicting as to whether or not Tobin, as president, had left checks signed in blank which the defendant might have used for securing this $1,900 from the bank. That question was, therefore, submitted to the jury as to whether or not they believed that the defendant had forged Tobin’s name to the $1,900 check or had utilized one of the checks which had been signed in blank lay Tobin and intrusted to the defendant for company purposes. The jury determined that the defendant was not guilty of forgery, but found him guilty of embezzlement of $1,900, so that question drops out of this case. True, the prosecution was unable to produce the two checks, one for $600 and the other for $1,900, but the inference from the evidence is very strong, indeed compelling, that the defendant destroyed these checks. The card retained by the bank which was signed by the person obtaining the canceled checks of the company was produced. It contained two signatures of “Valley Oil Company,” one on July 20, 1920, and one on August 2, 1920. The handwriting expert at the trial identified these signatures as the handwriting of the defendant. When the bank discovered the mistake and went to check up the matter with the Valley Oil Company, the defendant had left his employment and was not to be found, and the two checks which would have been evidence against the defendant had also disappeared. In the light of these facts and of other evidence of defendant’s guilt contained in the record, the inference that he secreted or destroyed these checks as a part of his scheme and to avoid detection is not unjustified.

The defendant is connected up with the cashing of the $1,900 check by the following facts: Miss Frances Blair, an employee of the bank, testified that on July 30, 1920, a man purchased from her, in the discharge of her duties, nineteen traveler’s checks of the denomination of $100 each; that this man signed his name to said cheeks, as was required at the time of purchase, as “George Rittenhouse,” and gave, in payment for the same, a check of the Valley Oil Company, bearing the names of Tobin and Rittenhouse, as president and secretary, respectively, for $1,900; that he stated *544 that he needed these traveler’s checks to go on a business trip for the company. These checks were cashed in various places and were countersigned “George Bittenhouse.” The defendant stipulated that such signatures, appearing twice on each of said checks, were signatures of the defendant. We can perceive no gap in the proof. The employee of the bank testified to the purchase of $1,900 of traveler’s checks, countersigned by “George Bittenhouse” in her presence. These checks were cashed by the defendant and returned to the bank in the usual course of business and produced at the trial. It is stipulated that the signatures countersigned thereon are signatures of the defendant. He, then, purchased these checks from the bank, and according to the testimony of the bank employee, he gave in payment therefor a check of the Valley Oil Company signed with the names of Tobin and himself. He had no authority to do this and Tobin testified that he never signed such a check. The defendant appropriated the proceeds of this Valley Oil Company check, which were exchanged for the traveler’s checks, to his own use.

[1] It is argued that as the $2,500 appropriated by the defendant was erroneously credited by the bank to the Oil Company’s account, the Oil Company has not suffered a loss,- and, therefore, the defendant has not embezzled the money. There is no merit in this contention. Under the facts in evidence, as between the bank and the Oil Company, the Oil Company would be liable to return to the bank the amount credited under a mistake, and is liable to the bank therefor. Of course, if it could be proven that the defendant had forged the signature of Tobin, the situation might be otherwise; but, under the finding made here by the jury, there was no forgery and the Oil Company is the loser by the- amount embezzled, at least so far as any issue in the present case is concerned.

With the reference to the count for forgery, upon which the defendant was found guilty, there was introduced in evidence a check for $70.03, payable to the defendant’s order and signed with the names of Tobin and Bittenhouse, as president and secretary, respectively. Tobin testified that he had not signed this cheek and had not authorized his name to be signed thereto, and his signature which is brought before this court in the record on appeal, for com *545 parison with the forged signature, amply bears out this testimony. The handwriting expert declared that the forged signature was in the handwriting of Rittenhouse. [2] Tobin testified that some time after Rittenhouse disappeared, he went back to the office of the company at night and made an entry in the books charging himself with the amount of this check. Appellant relies on this entry as negativing an intent to defraud. The charge was not a proper one, nor one that defendant was authorized to make on behalf of the company. As the jury found that the amount was secured on a forged check, the entry which Rittenhouse later made charging himself with the same on the books of the company cannot in any way save the situation as to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P. 86, 56 Cal. App. 541, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rittenhouse-calctapp-1922.