People v. Ryan

239 P. 419, 74 Cal. App. 125, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 204
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 3, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1213.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 239 P. 419 (People v. Ryan) 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. Ryan, 239 P. 419, 74 Cal. App. 125, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 204 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

The defendant was convicted on twenty-six counts of an indictment, of which nine counts charged the commission of forgery and seventeen charged the commission of the crime of forgery of a fictitious name. There was no demurrer to the complaint, and the points on appeal relate to the case as made by the evidence.

Appellant’s first point is that the checks described in counts V, XI, XVI, XXIII, XXVII and XXXII were not forgeries or forgeries of a fictitious name within the meaning of the statute. Count V may be taken as representing this group. The defendant was accused therein of the crime of *127 “forgery of a fictitious name, a felony.” The document containing the alleged forgery reads as follows:

“Los Angeles Branch 16-66
Bank of Italy
Savings Commercial Trust
“Los Angeles, Cal., 3/22 1823
“Pay to the order of cash .....................$2,781.00
“Twenty seven eighty one no/...................Dollars.
“M. P. Layton.”

It was alleged, among other things, that the said check “was then and there false and fictitious to the then knowledge of the said William Francis Ryan, and there was not then and there or at all any such person or individual as M. P. Layton, and the said William Francis Ryan then and there well knowing that he had no authority so to sign the name of said fictitious person to and upon said check.”

Appellant claims that because the check was payable to the order of cash and was his own personal check, as the bank well knew, although signed in the assumed name, such assumed name represented a real person and cannot be held to be fictitious. The argument is grounded upon the proposition, to which we agree, that a person may adopt a name different from that by which he has been known, and may transact business in that name. If this be done in good faith and not for the purpose of defrauding in the transaction, the use of such assumed name, even in the drawing of a check, would not be criminal. The use of such a name in that manner would not be the use of a fictitious name within the meaning of the statute. The persons guilty of forgery as described in section 470 of the Penal Code include one who, “with intent to defraud, signs the name of another person, or of a fictitious person, knowing that he has no authority so to do, to . . . any . . . check ...” Section 476 of the Penal Code imposes punishment in the state prison upon one who “makes, passes, utters, or publishes, with intention to defraud any other person, . . . any fictitious bill, note or check, purporting to be the bill, note, or check, or other instrument in writing for the payment of money or property of some bank, corporation, copartnership, or individual, when, in fact, there is no such bank, corporation, copartnership, or individual in existence, knowing the bill, note, check, or instrument in writing to be fictitious.”

*128 The method of procedure of the defendant is illustrated by the transactions relating to the fifth count. Having been first introduced to the Bank of Italy under the assumed name of M. P. Layton, he deposited two forged checks payable to the order of M. P. Layton, the total of these two checks amounting to $16,610. Thereafter he drew against that account by his check as M. P. Layton, payable “to the order of cash,” in the sum of $2,781. Admittedly the evidence was sufficient to establish the fact that there was no M. P. Layton. In substance the contention amounts to nothing more than that, although, according to the evidence, defendant was guilty of obtaining money under false pretenses, yet that he was not technically guilty of the crime of forgery or forgery of a fictitious name.

Special reliance is placed by appellant upon decisions which hold that “it is the essence of forgery that one signs the name of another to pass it off as the genuine signature of that other”' (People v. Bendit, 111 Cal. 274, 278 [52 Am. St. Rep. 186, 31 L. R. A. 831, 43 Pac. 901]); and that a check payable to the order of the maker can defraud no one, and is not the subject of forgery until it is indorsed by the maker. (People v. Thornburgh, 4 Cal. App. 38 [87 Pac. 234].) We think that these decisions are not applicable to the crime of forgery of a fictitious name as defined by section 470 of the Penal Code, as amended in 1905 [Stats. 1905, p. 673], in a case where, as here, it appears that the assumed and fictitious name was adopted by the criminal for the specific purpose of using it in the consummation of the fraudulent transaction. In an elaborate note on this subject found in 9 A. L. R. 407 et seq., at page 411, it is said: “Butwhile one may sign.a fictitious name which he has adopted for innocent purposes without being guilty of forgery, and while an assumption of a name generally for purposes of fraud is not sufficient to convict of forgery unless in the particular ease fraud is shown in using the name, yet, if such fraud is shown, the fact that the name had been previously assumed by the one signing it, and used for purposes of fraud generally, with no reference to the particular fraud, will not prevent the signature being a forgery; one cannot acquire a right to use a name not his own for fraudulent purposes, by using it any number of times previously for such purposes. Commonwealth v. Costello, (1876) 120 Mass. 358.”

*129 The second point urged by appellant is that he has been erroneously convicted on several counts and separately sentenced thereon, when in fact there was in relation to those counts not more than one criminal offense committed. This argument covers several groups of transactions. They may be illustrated by counts VI, VIII and X, under which it was shown that on or about the nineteenth day of June, 1923, under the assumed name of O. V. Snell, the defendant deposited with the First National Bank of Los Angeles three forged checks, payable to the order of O. V. Snell, one for $3,960, one for $14,880 and one for $16,570. Of these three checks the first purported to be signed by C. M. Olsen, the second by A. H. Gregg, and the third by J. M. Auckland. The evidence shows that in opening an account with the bank the defendant presented all of these checks at the same time. Appellant argues that on these facts the depositing of this group of cheeks constituted a single utterance, and that thereby, if he was guilty of any crime, he committed one crime and not three.

Count VI charges that the defendant, with intent to cheat and defraud, etc., did wilfully, etc., make, utter, publish and pass one of said checks. Count VIII charges that the defendant, with like intent, did wilfully, etc., make, forge, alter and counterfeit another of said checks. Count X charges that the defendant, with like intent, did wilfully, etc., make, forge, alter and counterfeit the third of said checks. It will be noted that the uttering and passing of the cheek is charged in the sixth count only. In People v. Frank, 28 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P. 419, 74 Cal. App. 125, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ryan-calctapp-1925.