People v. Rowland

106 P. 428, 12 Cal. App. 6, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 1909
DocketCrim. No. 102.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 106 P. 428 (People v. Rowland) 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. Rowland, 106 P. 428, 12 Cal. App. 6, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 58 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

*9 HART, J.

Under an indictment charging him with the crime of embezzlement, in the alleged felonious and fraudulent appropriation to his own use of the sum of $1,036.15, the money of the bank of Healdsburg, the defendant was convicted by a jury, and by the court sentenced therefor to a term of six years in the state prison.

This appeal is from the judgment of conviction and from the order of the court declining to grant defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The defendant had been for many years secretary and cashier of the bank of Healdsburg, Sonoma county. On the third day of December, 1908, W. C. Watson, state bank commissioner, having in his official capacity investigated the affairs of the bank, discovered a large shortage in the cash accounts, and thereupon ordered the institution closed to business, pending further investigation. The amount which it is claimed that the shortage represented exceeded the sum of $100,000. The charge in the indictment, however, relates to a transaction involving the sum of $1,000, and occurring on the seventh day of May, 1908, so it is alleged. It appears that on that date one Robert G. Cook paid to the bank a note calling for the sum of $1,000, together with interest accruing thereon, amounting to $36.15. This money had been borrowed from the bank by the firm of Cook & Passalacqua in the year" 1907, and the payment of the sum due on said note was made in the form of a check on said bank, Cook & Passalacqua then having sufficient funds in the bank to satisfy the note. The check was placed on the “file” used by the bank for such purpose by the party or official of the institution to whom it was delivered, and later an entry in the proper book made of the receipt thereof.

Appellant first claims and declares that there was introduced at the trial absolutely no evidence, either direct or circumstantial, showing that he embezzled any money from the bank of Healdsburg on the day alleged in the indictment; that, secondly, the court made erroneous rulings in the admission of evidence and that said rulings were prejudicial to his substantial rights, and, lastly, that, in its charge to the jury, the court, in several instances, committed vital errors and thus misdirected, to his prejudice, the jury upon questions of law.

*10 The record on this appeal contains an extended synopsis of the testimony given at the trial, but we do not feel called upon to present here anything like a detailed statement of the evidence, it being sufficient, in our opinion, to refer in a general way only to the facts.

1. The contention of the appellant is that there is no evidence of any nature whatsoever, except that of a general shortage, which proves, or tends to prove, to the required degree, that the specific offense charged was committed by the defendant, or, in fact, that there is no evidence showing that said offense or any other crime was committed by the defendant, or at all, except the alleged confession of the accused of the existence of a general shortage at the time the bank commissioner investigated the affairs of the bank and discovered that something was wrong in the cash accounts thereof. This contention involves, obviously, the claim that the corpus delicti was nqt shown by evidence independent of that of the confession.

It is, of course, a well-established rule of law that the confession or extrajudicial admissions of a party accused of crime cannot be considered for the purpose of proving the corpus delicti, or, in other words, of proving the elements necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged. (See People v. Tapia, 131 Cal. 651, [63 Pac. 1001]; People v. Jones, 123 Cal. 65, [55 Cal. 698] ; People v. Eldridge, 3 Cal. App. 648, [86 Pac. 832].) But this rule has never been so far extended in its scope or application as to require the elements or the body of the crime to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt before the admissions or confessions may be received and considered as evidence. As is said in People v. Jones, 123 Cal. 68, [55 Pac. 700]: “As to the degree of evidence required to show criminal agency [that is, the cause of the facts constituting the corpus delicti], a distinction must be taken between the evidence which upon the whole ease would justify a conviction, and that degree of proof of criminal agency in the burning of the buildings for the purpose of letting in evidence of the confessions or admissions of the defendant. To justify a conviction, the jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of every fact necessary to constitute the offense and to identify the defendant as the perpetrator j but it is not necessary that the evidence should *11 be of that conclusive character in order to justify the admission of the defendant’s confessions.” (Italics ours.)

In People v. Ward, 134 Cal. 306, [66 Pac. 374], the rule as thus expounded is reaffirmed, the court saying: “Nor is the other objection—‘that the corpus delicti had not been proven’—of any validity. Proof of the corpus delicti does not necessarily involve or require proof that the crime was * committed by the defendant, or person charged with having committed it. The general rule is, that it must first be shown; but, except in those cases where it is sought to put in evidence the confession or admission of the defendant, the order of proof is in the discretion of the court, and even in those cases plenary proof of the corpus delicti is not always required.” (See People v. Simonsen, 107 Cal. 346, [40 Pac. 440].)

The present question here, then, is, Does the evidence in the case at bar disclose sufficient proof of the corpus delicti, or the specific crime charged, to have warranted the admission of the confession in evidence ?

The question may be answered by a brief examination of the evidence. The record shows that these facts were proved by the evidence, presumably to the satisfaction of the jury: That, as before stated, the defendant was, for many years prior to the date of the discovery of the defalcations, the secretary and . cashier.of the Bank of Healdsburg; that, in that capacity, the administration of the affairs of the bank was practically under his direct and almost exclusive control; that the books of account were kept by clerks under his immediate direction; that he had the usual power vested in bank cashiers in the matter of making loans and in the performance of the numerous other duties involved in a general banking business. It may here be remarked that John Favour, the president of the bank, whose principal duties were to look after securities for loans and examining real estate upon which loans were sought from the bank, occasionally assisted the defendant in counting the cash. Further than this he had little, if anything, to do with the inside operations of the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
106 P. 428, 12 Cal. App. 6, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rowland-calctapp-1909.