People v. Swanson

123 Cal. App. 3d 1024, 176 Cal. Rptr. 915, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 2187
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 1981
DocketCrim. 37923
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 123 Cal. App. 3d 1024 (People v. Swanson) 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. Swanson, 123 Cal. App. 3d 1024, 176 Cal. Rptr. 915, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 2187 (Cal. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion

HANSON (Thaxton), J.

Background

By consolidated information, defendant Roy E. Swanson (hereinafter defendant and/or Swanson) was charged in counts I and II with grand theft in violation of Penal Code section 487, subdivision 1. In count III defendant was charged with issuing a check without sufficient funds, a violation of Penal Code section 476a, subdivision (a).

Defendant entered a plea of not guilty. His request to act as cocounsel for his defense was granted. Trial was by jury. Defendant’s motions for dismissal due to the People’s failure to prosecute were denied.

Defendant was found guilty as charged. His ex parte request for bail was denied. His motion to have the public defender relieved as counsel and to proceed in pro. per. was granted. Defendant’s motions for judgment of acquittal and for new trial were denied. Probation was denied. Defendant was sentenced to state prison for a total term of four years four months. The court imposed the high term of three years as to *1028 count I, the base term; it also imposed a consecutive term of eight months (one-third of the middle term of two years) for count II and a consecutive term of eight months (also one-third of the middle term of two years) for count III. Defendant was given credit for presentence time and his motion for stay of execution of sentence pending appeal was granted; bail on appeal was set at $175,000.

Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction.

Facts

The following evidence wsfs adduced below. Three individuals, Cox, Collins and Roach, had formed C.C. & R., a civil engineering firm, incorporated both in California and Arizona, for the purpose of land planning. Defendant and his company, RES Associates (actually a sole proprietorship), had been retained by the corporation to handle its tax and financial matters in November 1978. Defendant had represented himself as a certified public accountant and handed out business cards identifying himself as a certified public accountant, which he was not.

Companies such as C.C. & R. are required by law to deposit with the Internal Revenue Service (hereinafter the IRS) the taxes which are withheld from employees’ wages—“advance payroll deposits.” Such deposits are made periodically during 3-month periods, and a tax form is due within 30 days of the end of each fiscal quarter. One of defendant’s responsibilities was to make these deposits, although he was not authorized to or was not requested to advance the tax monies to the corporation or collect reimbursement from the corporation. Ordinarily, the withholding taxes were deposited by the company in a designated bank account and the bank would then forward the funds to the government.

Between November 1978 and April 1979 C.C. & R. issued several checks at defendant’s request, payable to RES Associates, representing the amounts of withholding taxes which were to be forwarded to the IRS. The parties had also agreed that defendant was to receive $90 per hour from the corporation for his financial advice and services. During this period, defendant did perform some services for the corporation.

On April 25, 1979, defendant met with the principals of C.C. & R., and they requested him to give them the receipts for the withholding taxes which defendant was supposed to have forwarded to the IRS. Defendant told the principals that he had the receipts in his possession and *1029 that he would give them to the corporation “sometime.” Defendant’s contract with C.C. & R. was terminated at the meeting because of his failure to pay the withholding taxes.

No withholding taxes were deposited by defendant or anyone else with the IRS on behalf of C.C. & R. in December 1978 or in January, February or March of 1979. The return due for the final quarter of 1978 on January 31, 1979, was not timely filed. The balance owing for the last quarter of 1978 was $8,682. The balance owed for the first quarter of 1979 totalled $21,398.83. (In addition, the Arizona corporation owed $6,763 for the final quarter of 1978 and $10,357 for the first quarter of 1979.) When the principals of C.C. & R. discovered the delinquency situation, they hired Leonard E. Aron, an attorney and certified public accountant, to assist them in straightening the matter out. C.C. & R. filed the delinquent return on April 30, 1979. Aron testified at trial that it was uncommon for an accountant to direct a client company to make withholding tax deposit checks payable to the accountant. There was additional testimony that checks in substantial amounts were drawn from the corporate account at Bank of A. Levy and made payable to RES Associates, but deposited by defendant in his personal account; December 8, 1978—$1,481.30; January 8, 1979—$2,480.58; January 26, 1979—$2,817.08; and February 15, 1979—$5,258.68. Thus was concluded the prosecution’s case-in-chief as to count I.

Counts II and III concerned defendant’s activities with respect to an individual named Jack Morgan, who retained defendant in January 1979 to handle Morgan’s tax matters. In April 1979 defendant sent Morgan a bill for $1,009, $832 of which purportedly were taxes advanced by defendant for Morgan. Morgan paid the bill, but it developed that defendant had not filed either a tax return or a request for extension for Morgan. In May 1979 defendant asked Morgan to loan him $2,000, which Morgan did. Defendant gave Morgan a check in repayment dated May 22, 1979, which was later returned marked “not sufficient funds.” There was testimony that on March 29, 1979, the balance in defendant’s bank account was $458.14, and that defendant made no deposits in the account after that date, and before defendant issued the check to Morgan for $2,000.

Defendant testified on his own behalf. He admitted that he had deposited to his account funds received from C.C. & R. totalling more than $38,000. He explained that he had “offset” the withholding tax monies against funds he declared were owed to him by the corporation *1030 for financial services which were not paid and which defendant believed would not be paid voluntarily in the amount of $40,000. Apparently defendant did not produce copies of any billings by him to the corporation; on rebuttal, witness Collins, one of the principals in the corporation, testified to receipt of only one billing from defendant for services rendered for 13.1 hours at $90 per hour.

Issues

On appeal defendant Swanson contends (1) that the trial court’s examination of him during his testimony was, in effect, judicial misconduct which prevented him from having a fair jury trial; (2) that there was insufficient evidence with respect to count III because there was no proof that defendant knew he did not have sufficient funds in his bank account to cover the $2,000 check he had issued to Morgan; (3) that the trial court’s refusal to strike certain references in Morgan’s testimony at trial to defendant’s having been in jail in May 1979 constituted reversible error; and (4) that he was improperly sentenced because of the trial court’s failure to state adequate reasons for imposing the high term on count I and giving consecutive sentences on counts II and III.

Discussion

I

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 Cal. App. 3d 1024, 176 Cal. Rptr. 915, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 2187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-swanson-calctapp-1981.