People v. Silver

197 P.2d 90, 87 Cal. App. 2d 337, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1334
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 1, 1948
DocketCrim. No. 2500
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 P.2d 90 (People v. Silver) 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. Silver, 197 P.2d 90, 87 Cal. App. 2d 337, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1334 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

On July 14, 1944 an indictment was presented accusing the appellant of soliciting and receiving a $200 bribe for giving out the questions to be asked in an examination for architects’ licenses. A motion to set aside the indictment was made and denied, whereupon a plea of not guilty was entered. At the ensuing trial the jury disagreed. Before the second trial opened appellant again moved, before a different judge, to dismiss and set aside the indictment, which motion was granted. The People appealed and this court reversed the order (People v. Silver, 75 Cal.App.2d 1 [170 P.2d 80]). A petition for hearing by the Supreme Court after [340]*340the decision of this court, was denied. At the second trial which then ensued, the jury found the appellant guilty. The present appeal is from the judgment and from the order denying a new trial.

The indictment alleges that the bribe was received in San Francisco on June 16, 1944. The examination was set for June 26, 1944.

Appellant had been with the State Board of Architectural Examiners from 1934 to 1939; he had been in the Army "for a period between 1939 and 1943, and in the latter part of 1943 had been reemployed by the board. His position was that of investigator. One Robert Anshen had studied architecture and held two degrees in that subject, but had never been licensed in California. He held a responsible position in a large wartime housing project in Vallejo, and in February, 1944, he and appellant first met. Anshen and one Allen had been associated in business and had designed and built a home in Wood-side, about which they had written an article published in a national architectural magazine over the names “Anshen & Allen, Architects.'’ Appellant's first interview with Anshen had to do with this article, as it gave the impression that Anshen was a practicing architect whereas he had not been licensed in California. According to Anshen, after a discussion of that matter (during which Anshen disclaimed having signed the article as “architect" and promised to request a correction), appellant dismissed the matter by saying he was only “kidding." According to appellant, however, there was no such amicable disposition of the matter, but it remained an open and active subject committed to his investigation, and he expected Anshen to clear it up. The bearing of this subject— remote as it may seem from the important question of a sale of examination questions—is of importance since appellant claims that when he received the envelope containing $200 in currency he understood it to contain the correspondence which Anshen had promised to send him touching the magazine article, and nothing else.

After the February meeting there was no communication between them until June 14. At the February meeting they had incidentally discussed the June 26 examination, in which Anshen had indicated his interest. In May Anshen filed his application to take it. In the late afternoon of Wednesday, June 14, appellant, en route from Sacramento to San Francisco, called at the project office, and as Anshen was not there, he called at Anshen's home in Vallejo. His visit was unexpected [341]*341and unannounced. Anshen, who was at home, invited him in, and they had a few drinks. He was asked to stay to dinner and finally accepted. There is a sharp conflict as to some of the incidents of that visit. Anshen testified that appellant indicated he knew the application had been filed, and questioned why Anshen had communicated with the board instead of with himself. Anshen testified, also, that appellant told him “They have asked me to proctor the examination in Los Angeles, and I don’t know whether I will or not, and it would be so much easier for you if you were to take it there” to which Anshen replied that he had arranged to take it in Berkeley. Anshen also testified that appellant told him that he sat with the board during oral examinations and that he volunteered the information that the principal problem of the examination would be the design of a veterans’ memorial clubhouse. Also, that appellant suggested that Anshen might look over former examination questions, which was permissible, and that he had those given in 1936, 1939, 1940, 1942 and 1943, which he got from his car and brought in and turned over to Anshen, who inquired whether he-could make notes from them and was told, “I am not looking anyway; I am reading the newspaper, ’ ’ or words to that effect. Anshen spent about three quarters of an hour looking over these old questions. These questions, given at prior examinations, were permitted by the board to be seen by candidates. They are not the questions upon which this prosecution was based, and which are about to be discussed.

According to Anshen, he saw appellant out to his car where, in the course of the parting conversation, appellant said 1 ‘ Some people say I can be bought and sold, but of course I can’t” and added “If you want the examination papers, let me know,” to which Anshen replied, “Where will you be?” and appellant responded, “How much are they worth to you?” After further conversation appellant said “Name any figure at all” and Anshen said “$150.00” to which appellant replied, “Oh, come, come. They are worth more than that to you.” Anshen then said “Well, you name any figure” and appellant said, “What about $500.00?” to which Anshen assented. All this is flatly denied by appellant, who testified that the visit of June 14, was for the purpose of following up his investigation of the magazine article, as Anshen had not sent, as promised, the correspondence looking to the correction. Appellant admitted that during the evening they discussed the coming examination and that he told Anshen he had been asked to [342]*342proctor the Los Angeles examination, but said he had declined, and he denied saying it would be easier for Anshen to take the examination in Los Angeles rather than Berkeley. Appellant admitted, also, that he had brought in the old examination questions and had permitted Anshen to look over them and make notes from them, but said he told him that the board did not permit anyone to copy them. Appellant denied flatly and definitely everything testified to by Anshen as to the parting conversation dealing with claimed negotiations as to price and the solicitation of a bribe.

The next day Anshen telephoned to his attorney, later consulted an architect friend of his, and thereafter got in touch with the attorney general’s office where he gave his version of what had occurred. State agents were assigned to the case and Anshen lent his cooperation. At a dinner on June 16, in the grill room of a San Francisco hotel, at' which Anshen was the host and appellant the guest, appellant inquired, according to Anshen, where the papers or the examination papers (he did not remember which) should be sent by him and when told that Anshen’s mail was opened at his office, appellant said “How about sending it to the General Delivery?” This being discarded, appellant asked if Anshen’s wife opened his mail and when he said “no, ’ ’ appellant said, “Well, I might as well send it to your house then” and that was agreed to. “At that point,” said Anshen, “I took the blank envelope with the money in it and put it over on his side of the table. ’ ’ The money referred to meant the ten $20 bills which had been supplied by the agents for that purpose, the serial numbers of which had been recorded. Appellant then wrote something on a slip of paper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 P.2d 90, 87 Cal. App. 2d 337, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-silver-calctapp-1948.