People v. Sinshiemer

182 Cal. App. 2d 103, 5 Cal. Rptr. 740, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2083
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 1960
DocketCrim. 6955
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 182 Cal. App. 2d 103 (People v. Sinshiemer) 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. Sinshiemer, 182 Cal. App. 2d 103, 5 Cal. Rptr. 740, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2083 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

FORD, J.

The appellant was accused of the crime of forgery (Pen. Code, § 470) in an information which contained four counts. She waived her right to trial by jury and was found guilty by the court with respect to the first, second and fourth counts and acquitted on the third count. Her motion for a new trial was denied and she was sentenced to imprisonment in the California Institution for Women for the term prescribed by law.

In the notice of appeal, the appellant states that she appeals “from the decision of the Court . . . and the judgment and sentence of the court rendered thereon . . . and from the denial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial. ” No appeal lies from a “decision” of the superior court (People v. Croxton, 162 Cal.App.2d 187, 189 [327 P.2d 611] ; see People v. Hassen, 144 Cal.App.2d 334, 345 [301 P.2d 80]) and, accordingly, the attempted appeal therefrom must be dismissed. The only question presented on this appeal as to each of the counts upon which the appellant was found guilty is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction. It will therefore be necessary to give a summary of the evidence.

The first count involved a check which appeared to be a payroll check of the A-One Laundry in the amount of $72.90 payable to Flora S. Beck and bearing the date of February 27, 1959. The printed number on the check was “No. 1534.” *105 George Mutsehler testified that he was the manager of a business known as Jerry’s Liquors and located at 9138 South Sepulveda Boulevard. About 9:30 o’clock one night shortly after the date of that check, the appellant came into his store alone, bought a small amount of liquor and asked the witness to cash the check. He did so. She endorsed the check in his presence.

The second count related to a cheek which also appeared to be a payroll cheek of the A-One Laundry in the amount of $72.90 payable to Flora S. Beck and bearing the date of February 27, 1959. The printed number on the check was “No. 1536.” Ray J. Collins testified that the appellant presented the check to him at his store, Feely’s Department Store, on a Sunday within a few days of its date. The appellant was alone and appeared to be “perfectly calm.” She bought some merchandise. The appellant endorsed the name “Flora S. Beck” on the check in the presence of the witness. Mr. Collins’ store was in the same area as that of Mr. Mutsehler.

The testimony of Ben Comsky was that he was the operator of the A-One Laundry, that he did not recognize the signatures on the two checks described hereinabove, that only he and his wife were authorized to sign such checks, and that he had discovered that 24 checks were missing, being Numbers 1522 to 1546. Such discovery was made when his bank called him “six or seven weeks ago, maybe a few days longer.” 1 He had no way of indicating the exact date when he received that information. He had no way of knowing how long prior to the time when the bank called that those checks had been taken. He had no employee by the name of Flora Beck. The appellant had never been employed by him.

The fourth count involved a check which appeared to be that of Artisan of California in the amount of $69.60 2 payable to Flora S. Beck and bearing the date of February 26, 1959. John Maglieri testified that he was a clerk in a liquor store on Sherman Way Drive. He had a transaction concerning that check with the appellant. She was alone. He remembered the transaction of cashing this check but did not remember “the defendant signing the check and endorsing it back.” The appellant bought some groceries but no liquor. She was *106 calm. William H. Lynch, testified that he was in the business of manufacturing lamps and shades and that the check was one of his printed checks but that the signature thereon was not his. He gave no one permission to sign this check. Thirty-three checks had been torn out of his checkbook “about six weeks ago. ’’ 3 He further testified as follows: “ Q. Six or seven weeks ago, can you remember the date with any precise accuracy? A. No. Q. Was it February? A. I will not say because I didn’t know anything like that would come up. I could have looked in the checkbook or I could have brought over the book itself and showed it to you.”

Officer Vincent Fallon testified that on March 25 he talked to the appellant. He showed her the checks involved in the four counts and asked her if she had passed them. She stated that she had. She further stated that she had not written on them and that they were pre-endorsed. She said that she had been made prisoner by two people who took her to various places and forced her to cash the checks.

The appellant testified in her own defense. She went to a house on Rodeo Road about February 25 pursuant to a telephone call relating to her foster sister, Jeannie. Her foster sister was not there. She was there held prisoner for about three days. At that house, the matter of cashing checks was discussed with her and eventually she did pass some cheeks. None of the writing on the cheeks in evidence was her writing. She had nothing to do with the Artisan of California check although she had seen it at the house. She believed she passed a check at Feely’s Department Store. In response to a question as to whether she could have passed a check at a liquor store at 9138 South Sepulveda Boulevard (the address of Mr. Mutschler who testified as to count 1), the appellant answered, “If it is a delicatessen also, yes, sir.” She knew that the checks were stolen. The reason that she passed these checks was as follows: “I was afraid for my physical safety, and I am not a very brave person physically. And I was also attempting, due to other situations which have been brought to my attention while I was at this residence, very desirous of getting in touch with the law enforcement agencies as soon as possible. I didn’t feel getting injured would assist myself or them in any way.” She testified as to threats: “Well, the exact threats were that I had seen Jeannie and I had seen the condition she was in, and that I would be put in a similar condition or *107 worse if I didn’t assist them in any way that I could to obtain this—the funds from these checks. I was—was pointed out to me that one of the men habitually carried a blackjack on his person at all times. And the threats were not simply insinuations ; it was merely a matter of male force, and my knowledge that it had been used in the past and they would not hesitate to use it again.” She passed about four or five checks. Within four hours after she was released, on March 3 she was taken by her parole officer to Corona. She had been convicted before for issuing checks without sufficient funds. The prior convictions were two in number.

Officer K. L. Woodward, a handwriting expert, was called as a witness by the appellant. He had not arrived at a definite opinion whether the appellant had written the signatures on the back of the checks.

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Bluebook (online)
182 Cal. App. 2d 103, 5 Cal. Rptr. 740, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sinshiemer-calctapp-1960.