People v. Seter

216 Cal. App. 2d 238, 30 Cal. Rptr. 759, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2011
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1963
DocketCrim. 3352
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 Cal. App. 2d 238 (People v. Seter) 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. Seter, 216 Cal. App. 2d 238, 30 Cal. Rptr. 759, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2011 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

PIERCE, P. J.

Appellant Forrest H. Seter is one of six defendants indicted and tried for conspiracy to commit theft. Three of said defendants, J. L. Levitt, Wallace Lund and Forrest H. Seter, were convicted. All three appealed but only Seter has filed a brief. Appellants Lund and Levitt were each duly notified by this court, pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 17 (a) * that unless a brief was filed within 30 days or good cause shown their appeals would be dismissed. No such showing has been made; no requests for relief were made; no briefs have been filed or submitted. The appeals of said Lund and Levitt will, therefore, be dismissed. Seter will hereinafter be referred to as appellant.

The conspiracy charged arises out of the activities of appellant and the other convicted defendants in the sale of so-called “memberships” in an organization (incorporated as a nonprofit corporation) known as California State Law Enforcement Officers Association. (Sale of advertising space for a magazine published by and for that organization is also somewhat incidentally involved.)

The theory of the prosecution was that the alleged conspira *241 tors actually schemed to and did obtain this money to be held and kept by themselves.

The trial commenced October 2, 1961, and ended November 14, 1961. The transcript of its proceedings is in 10 volumes with 2,270 pages. A principal contention of appellant is that the verdict against him is unsupported by substantial evidence.

During the period with which we are concerned, August 1960-May 1961, the “association” operated out of two offices, one in San Francisco, where appellant made his headquarters with defendant Levitt as part-time associate and assistant. The other office was in Sacramento, which office defendant Wallace Lund operated.

Memberships were sold by means of telephone salesmen located in both offices. These salesmen were given typewritten data and copies of the organization’s magazine to use. In making their persuasive appeals, these data were freely and sometimes imaginatively construed.

Most of the evidence related to the activities of the Sacramento office. Twelve or more citizens of the area testified to the successful solicitation of substantial sums of money from them under varying representations. Two women employees added their own testimony, freely admitting these representations, but protesting innocence regarding knowledge of their falsity. One salesman of the San Francisco office and one solicitee in that city also testified for the People.

The representations, although varying in scope, usually, if not always, included a statement to the effect that membership was comprised, as the name of the association would imply, “of law enforcement officers in all phases of the profession” but that it was open, on an invitational basis and by recommendation to selected private citizens; that it worked closely with all branches of law enforcement. Always included was a statement that a “Juvenile Assistance Trust Fund” was maintained, created to assist youngsters worthy of support and to aid in wiping out juvenile delinquency. Persons solicited were told sometimes that “all” or “most” or “a large portion” of the moneys contributed as “membership fees” would go into this fund. The specific purposes of the fund were variously described. Some prospects were told that a youth recreation building was to be erected; others that Boy Scout troops were being organized or outfitted. One can infer from the record that frequently the particular purpose stated was tailored to fit any specific project affecting youths in *242 which the person solicited had indicated an interest earlier in the conversation.

Solicitees were also told about a fully-equipped “Mountain Rescue Unit” staffed by trained personnel already in operation, with another to be soon organized in Sacramento. An oxygen tank was stated to be a part of the equipment. The existing unit was said to be on call 24 hours daily to “state areas where local equipment is overtaxed and additional help is needed.” It was stated “ [t]he vehicle and staff have been instrumental in saving lives in its short history and lending assistance on accident scenes.” The soliciting salesmen represented themselves to be unpaid volunteers and implied, and sometimes stated, they were police officers acting on their own time.

If the telephone solicitation was successful or if sufficient interest seemed to have been awakened, a “collector” would then be sent to call on the prospect. In Sacramento this was undertaken by an employee, the defendant Baker, or by defendant Lund, the Sacramento manager. These two would repeat as much of the original pitch as might be necessary. They also sometimes represented themselves as unpaid volunteers. Upon payment of all of the “membership fee” or such part as the collectors could get, a “membership kit” was issued. Included in this kit was a metal lapel badge (so closely similar to that of the California Highway Patrol as to be indistinguishable), a special “merit award,” a “membership card” and several windshield stickers.

To some of the new “members” it would be represented, usually with some indirection, that parking tickets could be fixed by use of the stickers or the membership cards. Seter, in testifying, justified the practice of solicitors using military titles on the theory that these titles had been bestowed by him as the “rank” of salesmen in their capacity as members of the “rescue unit.’’

Whatever may have been the nature and integrity of this organization in its inception, it was not, at the time of any of the events involved here, an association of law enforcement officers at all. As Seter himself testified: “I am the association.” He described it as a “vest pocket” organization. He hired and fired personnel at will, opened and closed bank accounts, falsified corporate minutes of unheld meetings; answered to no one. There was no actual membership participation in the business of the “organization.” Although Seter had at one time been a state police officer, he had had no eon *243 nection with any law enforcement organization for several years, and none of the others employed by him ever had had any association whatever with law enforcement work. In the phone solicitations and in printed brochures the public was told that the “association” was the largest California association of law enforcement officers and citizen members with members in every branch of law enforcement. This representation was repeated over and over again. It had no foundation in fact. Appellant testified he had no idea what the size of the membership of the association actually was and on cross-examination could not tell how many, if any, of its members were in law enforcement.

“Membership” prospects were not in fact selected by recommendation. On the contrary, names were taken from the yellow pages of the telephone book or from the city directories. These prospects were informed, however, that they had been chosen as the result of careful selection but that the association’s rules prohibited disclosure of the identity of other members except at the periodical banquet of members.

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Related

People v. Morante
975 P.2d 1071 (California Supreme Court, 1999)
People v. Chapman
261 Cal. App. 2d 149 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
Davis v. Municipal Court
243 Cal. App. 2d 55 (California Court of Appeal, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
216 Cal. App. 2d 238, 30 Cal. Rptr. 759, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-seter-calctapp-1963.