People v. Stone

195 Cal. App. 2d 282, 15 Cal. Rptr. 737, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1451
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 1961
DocketCrim. 7553
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 195 Cal. App. 2d 282 (People v. Stone) 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. Stone, 195 Cal. App. 2d 282, 15 Cal. Rptr. 737, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1451 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

LILLIE, J.

Stone and the defendants Cress were charged by information with conspiracy to commit forgery (count I), forgery of an operator’s license in violation of section 4463 of the Vehicle Code (count II) and forgery of a fictitious name (count III). The matter having been submitted on the transcript at the preliminary hearing, Stone was found guilty of the offenses charged in count I and II and not guilty on count III. He appeals from the judgment (granting probation) and the sentence.

The facts as revealed by the record are as follows: On December 21, 1959, Officer A. M. Barr, assigned to the forgery detail of the Los Angeles Police Department, received a telephone call from one Ansoorian, the proprietor of a Los Angeles printing establishment. According to Ansoorian, he had received an order to print 500 checks on the Advance Rug and Upholstery Cleaners. Since the person placing the order failed to furnish the name of the drawee bank, Ansoorian contacted Advance Rug and was told that no such order had been given. Barr and another officer then called on Ansoorian; the latter told them that he had again heard from the person placing the order, and that he (Ansoorian) would receive a bonus if the checks were printed that day on the Security-First National Bank at Santa Barbara and Vermont. Upon contacting the bank, Barr was advised that there was no such account at the branch, nor any arrangements there for credit.

A stake out was established. On December 23, shortly after 1 p. m., Officer Barr observed defendant Lloyd Cress enter *285 Ansoorian’s place of business. A few seconds later Sergeant Kamp, who was on the premises, advised Barr by means of walkie-talkie that Cress had walked in and asked for the checks. After an interval of some three minutes, Cress departed with a small package wrapped in brown paper and entered his car. Barr and other officers then followed Cress. According to Barr, the officers “followed him for approximately one hour up and down every side street in that particular area, through alleys, through parking lots, through gas stations. The defendant would drive up a residential street, pull into a private driveway, park there for about 10 seconds, turn around and back out and reverse the field again going through alleys, down an alley, make a U-turn in the alley and come back out again ...” Defendant Cress finally drove to 5247 Adams, the address of Replica Photo Shop; he entered the shop between 2:15 and 2:25 and emerged at 3:05. The officers then followed Cress’ car until 4:45 when it was lost in traffic.

Officer Barr, it further appears, had observed appellant on two occasions at the Replica Photo Shop; he also discovered that appellant was its owner. A check of police records disclosed that in 1959 appellant, at the same address, had been arrested for possessing and furnishing fictitious operators’ licenses and lewd photos.

On January 4, a week or so later, Barr and other officers entered appellant’s shop; Barr introduced himself and the other officers, stating they were from “Forgery.” Asked if this meant anything to him, appellant answered that it did not. Barr then said: “Sit down. We have something to tell you.” The officer then said: “On the 23rd day of December we tailed a man here that had a bunch of fictitious checks that were printed and he came in here for the purpose of having fictitious driver’s licenses made . . . He was in here for over an hour and a half . . . Does that mean anything to you?” When appellant replied in the negative, the officer said: ‘ Look, the negatives are around here some place and we want the negatives or the rest of the operator’s licenses.” Appellant replied: “I haven’t got the rest of the operator’s licenses. I have got the negative. I will give you that.” Appellant was then arrested. He thereupon produced the negative and gave it to Barr; he also identified defendant Lloyd Cress, adding that he was married to defendant Edna Cress who formerly modeled for him.

*286 Subsequently, in response to the officers’ inquiry, appellant stated that he had made four or five operators’ licenses from the negative. When asked if he knew that Lloyd Cress was going to pass checks with the licenses, appellant replied: “Yes, I think I did.” Pressed for an explanation of his answer, appellant said: “Well, I saw some of the checks . . . The first time he came in.” Shown four checks (People’s exhibits) bearing the imprint “Advance Bug and Upholstery Cleaners,” appellant stated that they resembled the checks formerly in the possession of Lloyd Cress; according to appellant, Cress had offered him one of the checks, but appellant declined to accept it. Although protesting that he “didn’t forge anything,” appellant admitted that he made licenses for Lloyd Cress in the name of Betty Vaughn (a name used by defendant Edna Cress) and Leo Bundy (an alias used by defendant Lloyd Cress); these “white copies” he gave to Lloyd Cress who returned on a later date with the “white copies” signed.

The next day, at police headquarters, appellant made similar admissions relating to the matters just related; defendant Lloyd Cress, who had been taken into custody the previous day, was present on this occasion. Appellant stated that he was not sure of the total number of licenses involved-—there might, he said, have been as many as ten.

Incriminating admissions were also made by both of the defendants Cress. Edna, who was likewise taken into custody on June 4, admitted that she had signed the name “Betty Vaughn” on the checks and knew they were no good—as will appear hereinafter, the operators’ licenses in question were utilized by her as and for the identification customarily required in such transactions. A paymaster cheek protector and an operator’s license were found in an overnight case, the key to which was supplied by Edna. Lloyd Cress also had a key which fitted the overnight kit. He admitted that he used the name “Leo Bundy” in passing certain of the checks, and he also stated that he and his wife had used the names on five licenses in writing and passing cheeks.

Four of the checks passed, as noted above, were received in evidence. Three were cashed at various stores by Edna Cress as the payee “Betty Vaughn” and the fourth by Llojrd Cress under the payee’s name “Leo Bundy”; all four instruments bore identifying marks which represented the number of the operator’s license used. Finally, there was testimony that there was no account at the drawee bank in the name of Advance Bug and Upholstery Cleaners whose name was imprinted on *287 each check; it was further established that Atlas Rug had given no one, including the appellant, permission to print the checks.

Appellant’s argument is presented under a single heading reading as follows: The trial court was without jurisdiction to proceed to trial on the information for lack of legal commitment for trial.” A more satisfactory presentation of his assignments of error would have been achieved if subheadings had been used to describe the specific contentions raised. They are four in number and are discussed but briefly.

First, it is contended that appellant’s admissions of guilt were obtained only after he had been illegally detained by the officers who eventually placed him under arrest. Such argument is based upon the testimony of Officer Barr that he told appellant to “Sit down.

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Bluebook (online)
195 Cal. App. 2d 282, 15 Cal. Rptr. 737, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stone-calctapp-1961.