People v. Talbot

28 P.2d 1057, 220 Cal. 3, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 492
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1934
DocketDocket No. Crim. 3668.
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 1057 (People v. Talbot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Talbot, 28 P.2d 1057, 220 Cal. 3, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 492 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

THE COURT.

A hearing was granted in this case after decision by the District Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Two, to consider the question whether the appropriation of corporate funds by the defendants was made with fraudulent intent, an element necessary to constitute embezzlement. We have painstakingly re-examined the record on this issue. Certain evidence tended to show that defendants were not conscious that their acts amounted to embezzlement even if they did constitute bad business practice. The record shows that each of the defendants and numerous employees had drawing accounts with the corporation; that the withdrawals by defendants were made openly, with no attempt at concealment; that the canceled checks were returned to the corporation; that defendants were charged on the books with all of the expenditures; and that no manipulation of accounts took place. It is further contended, and we may assume that it is true, that the practice of making advances of this sort to corporate officers and employees during this period was common, not *8 only in the Richfield company but in other corporations as well. The prevalence of this unlawful practice cannot, of course, justify it.

These and other facts were before the trial court, and that court was permitted to draw the inference of fraudulent intent from the admitted fact that the funds were appropriated and used for the personal purposes of the defendants. In this state of the record, the appellate court may not disturb the findings and judgment.

We therefore adopt the opinion prepared by Mr. Justice pro tem. Archbald, of the District Court óf Appeal, as the opinion of this court. It reads as follows:

“James A. Talbot, Clarence M. Fuller and Raymond W. McKee were charged in count I of an indictment with conspiracy to commit the crime of grand theft, and in the remaining nine counts thereof they were charged with nine separate offenses of the same nature. The defendants were tried jointly on all counts before the court without a jury, the trial resulting in an acquittal of all three on the charge of conspiracy. Talbot was found guilty on counts II and VI, Fuller guilty as to counts III, IV, V, VII, VIII and IX, and McKee guilty under count X. Each defendant was found not guilty as to all counts other than the ones upon which he was convicted. From the judgments of conviction entered upon such findings, and from, the orders denying their respective motions for a new trial, defendants have separately appealed.
“At the time the nine alleged acts of grand theft were committed, Talbot was chairman of the board of directors of the Richfield Oil Company of California, Fuller was president and McKee a vice-president and assistant to Talbot. As chairman of the board, Talbot had charge of financing and production, Fuller of refining and marketing and McKee of accounting. The amount which the defendants are charged in the first count with having conspired to take from the company is $245,325, which is the sum total of the nine overt acts of taking set out in said count. The amounts charged in counts II to X, inclusive, as having been taken by defendants, and the dates on which they were respectively taken, are the same as alleged in count I with reference to the nine overt acts, and each is the amount of a check drawn against the funds of said company.
*9 “Prior to becoming chairman of the board of directors of the Richfield Oil Company, Talbot was the president of that corporation, the by-laws providing that the president should' have ‘general and active management of the business of the corporation’. When the office of chairman of the board of directors was created, an amendment to the by-laws was adopted providing that such chairman should ‘share with the president in the general management of the business of the company and the direction of all other officers of the corporation’. The transcript of testimony herein impresses the reader with the fact that the very general powers thus delegated were used to their utmost by Talbot, when president of the company, and by Talbot and Puller later. As one witness expressed it, ‘it was more or less a two man company’, and apparently the directors reposed ‘absolute confidence’ in them. Counsel in their briefs agree that the head of the company exercised ‘almost autocratic powers’ in handling its affairs, from the beginning to the calamitous end. In fact, the only limit that seems to have been imposed on such autocratic powers by the board of directors was in July of 1929, when an amendment to the by-laws was adopted providing that ‘no single item of capital expenditure shall be made by the company in excess of $50,000’ without the approval of one of the two representatives of certain investment bankers on the finance committee of the institution.
“With this preamble we shall discuss the case of each appellant separately.
“Appeal of J. A. Talbot.
“Count II of the indictment, on which this appellant was found guilty, involves a check of the Richfield Oil Company in the sum of $50,000 dated October 2, 1929, payable to the order of Ingoldsby-Giles & Company, a stock brokerage firm in Los Angeles. There is testimony to the effect that this check was issued at the request of Talbot, through McKee, and that Talbot directed that it be charged to his account on the books of the company, but also to charge Fuller’s account with $25,000 of it, crediting his, Talbot’s, account with a like amount. Talbot testified that he ordered his secretary to send a check for $50,000 to the brokerage firm but that he did not know until later that *10 a Richfield check was sent. His secretary, however, testified that Talbot called her from San Francisco and told her that a Richfield check had been sent to Ingoldsby-Giles & Company, to charge it to his account and to advise the brokerage concern to credit him with $25,000 and Fuller with $25,000. Appellant Talbot had an account with the brokerage firm called ‘J. A. Talbot No. 7 Account’, in which one Newberger, also a director, of the Richfield Oil Company, was jointly interested, and also a private account. The brokerage house also carried an account called ‘Richfield Employees’ Account’, in which was kept the stock transactions of several officers and employees of the company. Prior to October 2d, money was requested by the brokers ‘ principally for the adjustment of said No. 7 account’. Talbot owed said firm on his personal account, on September 30, 1929, $74,024.10, and was short 360 shares of common stock of the Richfield company of the then approximate market value of $40 per share. Appellant Fuller owed the same firm on October 1, 1929, the sum of $306,709.73, and apparently the brokerage office was holding at the time, to protect such balance, 8000 shares of Richfield and 1000 shares of so-called Fokker stock. Fuller knew nothing of the credit of $25,000 to his account until later, when Talbot told him that it was necessary to advance it to the brokerage firm to keep the stock from being sold.
“Count VI, under which, also, Talbot was convicted, involves a check of the Richfield Oil Company dated October 24, 1929, in the sum of $50,000, payable to Fuller and endorsed by him, and signed by Talbot and McKee.

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Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 1057, 220 Cal. 3, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-talbot-cal-1934.